Names Categorized "rare Polish"

This is a list of names in which the categories include rare Polish.
gender
usage
Anielka f Polish (Rare), Central American
Polish diminutive of Aniela. This name has become particularly popular in Nicaragua, though a connection to the Polish name is not clear.
Balbina f Spanish, Portuguese (Rare), Polish (Rare), Italian (Rare), Ancient Roman
Feminine form of Balbinus. Saint Balbina was a 2nd-century Roman woman martyred with her father Quirinus.
Benedykta f Polish (Rare)
Polish feminine form of Benedict.
Eunika f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Eunice.
Filipina f Polish (Rare)
Polish feminine form of Filip.
Fryderyka f Polish (Rare)
Polish feminine form of Frederick.
Idalia f Germanic (Latinized), Greek Mythology, Polish (Rare)
Probably from a Germanic name derived from the element idal, an extended form of id possibly meaning "work, labour". Unrelated, this was also an epithet of the Greek goddess Aphrodite, given because the city of Idalion on Cyprus was a center of her cult.... [more]
Ignacja f Polish (Rare)
Polish feminine form of Ignatius.
Izolda f Georgian, Russian, Hungarian, Polish (Rare)
Georgian, Russian, Hungarian and Polish form of Iseult.
Jacenty m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Hyacinthus. Saint Jacenty was a 13th-century Dominican monk from Krakow who was said to have taken missionary journeys throughout Northern Europe and Asia.
Jagusia f Polish (Rare)
Diminutive of Jaga.
Jarogniew m Polish (Rare)
Derived from the Slavic elements jarŭ "fierce, energetic" and gněvŭ "anger".
Klotylda f Polish (Rare), Czech (Rare)
Polish and Czech form of Clotilde.
Krystiana f Polish (Rare)
Polish variant of Christina.
Kunegunda f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Kunigunde. The 13th-century Saint Kunegunda was the daughter of Bela IV, king of Hungary. She married Boleslaus V of Poland, but after his death refused to assume power and instead became a nun.
Lew 2 m Polish (Rare)
Polish cognate of Lev 1.
Lucjusz m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Lucius.
Pelagia f Ancient Greek, Greek, Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Pelagius. This was the name of a few early saints, including a young 4th-century martyr who threw herself from a rooftop in Antioch rather than lose her virginity.
Salomea f Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Salome.
Serafin m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Seraphinus (see Seraphina).
Serafina f Italian, Spanish, Portuguese (Rare)
Italian, Spanish and Portuguese form of Seraphina.
Sobiesław m Polish (Rare)
Derived from Slavic elements, probably sebě "to oneself" and slava "glory". This name (in the Czech form Soběslav) was borne by two 12th-century dukes of Bohemia.
Sobiesława f Polish (Rare)
Polish feminine form of Sobiesław.
Tekla f Swedish, Latvian, Georgian, Hungarian, Polish (Archaic)
Form of Thekla in several languages.
Teofila f Italian (Rare), Polish (Rare)
Italian and Polish feminine form of Theophilus.
Uriasz m Polish (Rare)
Polish form of Uriah.
Wacława f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Wacław.
Wojciecha f Polish (Rare)
Feminine form of Wojciech.
Zula 1 f Polish (Rare)
Polish diminutive of Zuzanna.