Gul (name)

Gul ګل
Pronunciation/ˈɡʊl/
GenderUnisex
Language(s)Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Persian, Pashto and Turkish
Origin
Meaning"Yellow" in Swedish, Danish and Norwegian. "Rose" in Turkish. "Flower" in Persian, Pashto and Kurdish.
Region of originEurope and Central Asia

Gul is a common name in Persian[1] (گل Gol), Pashto (ګل Gwal) and Turkish (Gül) languages, meaning rose.[2] Gul is used as a family name in Europe, Central and South Asia.

It is also a Nordic given name, used in Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian languages as a short form of Guðólfr (Godwulf).[3]

The name is also an abbreviation used in the medieval and early modern periods for William (derived from French Guillaume), for example in the signature "Gul: Ebor" for William Dawes, Archbishop of York.[4]

Given name

Males

Females

  • Gül Gölge (born 1981), Turkish model and actress
  • Gul Panag (born 1979), Indian Bollywood actress
  • Gul Panra (born 1989), Pakistani Pashto singer
  • Gul Rukhsar, Pakistani Pashto Singer
  • Gulalai Wazir, Pashtun Politician
  • Gulalai Ismael, Human Rights Activist
  • Gul Wareenah, a common pashtun girl name

Surname

Notable people with the surname Gul or Gül include:

  • Abdullah Gül (born 1950), Turkish politician and 11th President of Turkey
  • Aftab Gul, Pakistani cricketer
  • Ajab Gul, Pakistani actor-turned-director
  • Amir Gul, Pakistani footballer
  • Awal Gul, Afghan prisoner of the United States at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base
  • Dawd Gul, Afghan prisoner of the United States at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base
  • Faruk Gül, Turkish American economist
  • Gerardus Gul, Dutch bishop of the Old Catholic Church of the Netherlands
  • Hamid Gul, former Director General of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence
  • Khi Ali Gul, Afghan prisoner of the United States at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base
  • Meirchion Gul, 5th-century king of Rheged (modern-day northern England)
  • Mohammad Gul, Afghan prisoner of the United States at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base
  • Roman Gul, Russian émigré writer
  • Sahar Gul, Afghan child bride tortured by her husband's family
  • Sajjad Gul, Pakistani CEO
  • Shabnum Gul (born 1963), Pakistani writer
  • Umar Gul, Pakistani cricketer
  • Yekta Yılmaz Gül (born 1978), Turkish Greco-Roman wrestler

See also

References

  1. ^ "Gul".
  2. ^ Francis Joseph Steingass, A Comprehensive Persian-English Dictionary: gul[permanent dead link] (Digital Dictionaries of South Asia, University of Chicago)
  3. ^ "Gul". Nordic Names. September 17, 2015.
  4. ^ Deeds of Londesborough and area: Lease for years MD239/35, 1 Jul 1715. The National Archives, UK. Retrieved 19 November 2010