Murad or Mourad (Arabic: مراد) is an Arabic name. It is also common in Armenian, Azerbaijani, Bengali, Turkish, Persian, and Berber as a male given name or surname and is commonly used throughout the Muslim world and Middle East.[1]
Etymology
It is derived from the Arabic Semitic triliteral root رود (r-w-d). Its Arabic meaning can be translated roughly into wanted,[2] desired, wished for, yearned or goal.
Given name
Ottoman sultans
- Murad I (1326–1389), often nicknamed Hüdavendigâr—from Persian: خداوندگار Khodāvandgār —"the devotee of God", the third sultan. Received the name Murad through a play on the Arabic word "mordd", which means "wish" or "desire".[3]
 - Murad II (1404–1451)
 - Murad III (1546–1595)
 - Murad IV (1612–1640)
 - Murad V (1840–1904)
 
Others
- Murad
 
- Mawlana Murad, Islamic scholar
 - Şehzade Murad, Ottoman prince
 - Murad, Veteran Bollywood Indian Actor
 - Murad Artin (born 1960), Armenian-Swedish politician
 - Murad Mirza, second son of Mughal Emperor Akbar
 - Murad Baksh (died 1661), youngest son of Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan and Empress Mumtaz Mahal
 - Murad Bey (1750–1801), Egyptian Mamluk chieftain
 - Murad Qureshi, British Bangladeshi Labour Party politician
 - Murad Umakhanov (born 1977), Russian wrestler and Olympian
 - Murad Wilfried Hofmann (1931 – 2020) German diplomat and author.
 
- Mourad
 
- Mourad the Great, nickname of Hampartsoum Boyadjian, an Armenian fedayee and political activist
 - Mourad Benachenou, Algerian politician
 - Mourad Benchellali, French citizen captured and detained in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps
 - Mourad Bouzidi, Dutch–Tunisian kickboxer
 - Mourad Daami, Tunisian football referee
 - Mourad Daoudi El Ghezouani, Moroccan footballer
 - Mourad Ikhlef, Algerian arrested and deported from Canada on allegations of past involvement with the Armed Islamic Group and a connection to Ahmed Ressam
 - Mourad Marofit (born 1982), Moroccan long-distance runner
 - Mourad Medelci, Algerian politician
 - Mourad Meghni, Algerian footballer
 - Mourad Salem, Tunisian artist based in France
 - Mourad Topalian, Armenian-American political activist
 
- Morad
 
- Morad Fareed, New York–based entrepreneur and former athlete
 - Morad Mohammadi, Iranian wrestler and Olympian.
 - Morad Sari
 - Morad (Spanish rapper) (born 1999)
 - Morad (born 1977), French rapper in Scred Connexion
 
Surname
- Murad
 
- Abdul Hakim Murad (militant), alleged conspirator in the planned attacks called Operation Bojinka
 - Abdal Hakim Murad (born: Timothy John Winter, 1960) English academic, theologian and Islamic scholar
 - Adel Murad, Iraqi politician
 - Ferid Murad, American physician and pharmacologist
 - Hadji Murad, Avar military commander
 - Hilmi Murad, Egyptian politician
 - Mohammad Murad, Kuwaiti wildlife photographer
 - Murad Ali Murad, Afghan Army officer
 - Nadia Murad, Iraqi Yazidi human rights activist
 - Murad, Veteran Bollywood Indian Actor
 - Raza Murad, Indian character actor, son of Murad
 - Sayed Noorullah Murad, an Afghan politician, military commander and former deputy minister
 - Timothy Winter, aka Abdal-Hakim Murad, British Islamic scholar
 - Waheed Murad, Pakistani film producer, writer, and actor
 - Zuhair Murad, a Beirut-based Lebanese fashion designer
 
- Mourad
 
- Ahmed Mourad, an Egyptian author and screenwriter of fiction and non-fiction
 - George Mourad (born 1982), Syrian Swedish footballer of Assyrian descent
 - Leila Mourad (1918–1995), Egyptian singer and actress
 - Mounir Mourad (1922–1981), Egyptian artist, singer and actor
 - Nidal Mourad (born 1988), Canadian musician and producer
 
- Morad
 
- Daniel Morad (born 1990), Canadian race car driver
 - Dashni Morad (born 1986), Kurdish singer, songwriter, television presenter, human rights & environmental activist.
 - Luciana Morad, also known as Luciana Gimenez, Brazilian fashion model and TV show hostess
 
Other names
Murad Buildings,Construction company of Uzbekistan
See also
- Murat (disambiguation), modern Turkish spelling of Murad
 - Murat (name)
 - Murod, an Uzbek given name
 - Muradian, Armenian surname
 - Muradyan, Armenian surname
 - Mrad (disambiguation)
 - Murad Buildings, Construction company of Uzbekistan
 
References
- ↑ Pearce, Karen (2002). Multicultural matters: names and naming systems. London: Building Bridges. p. 194. ISBN 0-9543653-0-5.
 - ↑ Leslau, Wolf (1990). Arabic Loanwords in Ethiopian Semitic. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 9783447030007.
 - ↑ Iskander, Munshi (1978). The history of Shah ʻAbbas the Great. University of Michigan: Westview Press. p. 1399. ISBN 9780891582960.
 
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