Jeronimo is the Spanish and Portuguese form of the Greek–Latin Hieronymus (“sacred name”), transmitted through ecclesiastical Latin into the Iberian vernaculars and subsequently carried into Anglo-American usage, where its spelling often converges with the Anglicized Jerome yet retains a distinct five-syllable cadence (juh-RON-uh-moh). Historically, the name invokes a triple constellation of references: Saint Jerome, the fourth-century scholar whose Vulgate became the textual bedrock of Western Christianity; Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont, the Renaissance polymath who foreshadowed steam engineering; and, in the North American imagination, the Chiricahua Apache leader Geronimo, whose anglicized sobriquet lent the name an enduring aura of audacity. Contemporary U.S. vital-statistics data reveal a long, low-amplitude presence—rarely surpassing 100 births per annum yet rarely disappearing—suggesting that Jeronimo appeals to parents seeking a culturally textured choice that is recognizable across languages while remaining numerically uncommon.
| Jeronimo - |
| Jerónimo Saavedra - |
| Jerónimo Girón-Moctezuma, Marquis de las Amarillas - |
| Jerónimo Jacinto de Espinosa - |
| Jerónimo Morales Neumann - |
| Jerónimo Arango - |
| Jerónimo Zurita y Castro - |
| Jerónimo Manrique de Lara - |