Kassius

Meaning of Kassius

Kassius is the kind of name that strolls into the room with old-world pedigree and a brand-new jacket. Rooted in the ancient Roman family name Cassius—thought to come from the Latin cassus, “empty” or “hollow,” though some say it once meant “helmeted” in lost Etruscan lore—it carries millennia of history on its shoulders. Swap the C for a striking K and you get a modern reboot that feels both classic and cutting-edge, a little like fitting a vintage watch with a smart strap. Literary buffs will hear the echoes of Shakespeare’s sharp-minded senator in Julius Caesar, while sports fans can’t miss the nod to Cassius Clay before he floated like a butterfly as Muhammad Ali. In the U.S. the name has been bobbing and weaving up the popularity charts—never cracking the crowded Top 500, yet gaining steady traction, with about a hundred baby Kassius entries a year. That sweet spot means parents can gift their son a name recognizable enough to avoid the perpetual “How do you spell that?” loop, yet rare enough to feel like it was minted just for him. All told, Kassius blends Roman gravitas with twenty-first-century spark, a polished classic with a hint of rebel edge.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as KAH-see-uhs (/ˈkæsiəs/)

Latin

  • Pronunced as KAH-shee-oos (/kaːs̠i.ʊs̠/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Notable People Named Kassius

Kassius Robertson -
Kassius Nelson -
Diana Brooks
Curated byDiana Brooks

Assistant Editor