Roxane

#49 in Hawaii

Meaning of Roxane

In the soft glow of dawn, Roxane unfolds like an ancient lyric sung in the courts of Bactria, her name traced from the Persian Roshanak—“little star” or “radiant one”—through the mellifluous currents of Greek and Latin tongues into our own English rahk-SAYN and the Parisian roks-AHN. She carries with her the memory of a princess who danced across Alexander’s campaigns, and later, the whispered poetry of Cyrano’s beloved, whose wit and courage illuminated the dim salons of seventeenth-century France. In her syllables there is both the fire of the Orient and the elegance of classical Europe, a tapestry of light and lineage that feels at once intimate and grand. Though she glimmered quietly on Pennsylvania’s birth registers in the mid-twentieth century—flickering between the two-dozenth and two-hundredth ranks—her story lingers like an heirloom, ready to be reborn in a new generation who will give her life again. Warm and expansive, Roxane is more than a name: she is a promise of dawn, a narrative woven from stars and song, beckoning each child who bears her toward brilliance.

Pronunciation

English

  • Pronunced as rahk-SAYN (/rɑkˈseɪn/)

French

  • Pronunced as roks-AHN (/ʁɔksan/)

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Notable People Named Roxane

Roxane Gay -
Roxane Desjardins -
Roxane Bruneau -
Roxane Duran -
Mariana Castillo Morales
Curated byMariana Castillo Morales

Assistant Editor