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Ivan

Ivan is a masculine given name widely used in Slavic and Baltic languages, and in several non-Slavic contexts. It is the local form of John, derived from the Hebrew Yohanan meaning “God is gracious.” The name entered Slavic languages through Church Slavonic from the Greek Ioannes and Latin Ioannes, and is now common in Russia, Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia, Ukraine, Moldova, and other countries. Diminutives include Vanya, Ivashka, Ivanko, and Ivanka (the feminine form). The name has many cognates and variants in other languages, such as Ioannes (Latin), Ioan (Romanian), Iwan (German), Jovan (Serbian), Ivan (Bulgarian, Russian), Iván (Spanish), Yvan (French), and Ion (Romanian).

Ivan is often used in literature and history. Notable individuals named Ivan include Ivan the Terrible, Tsar

of
Russia
(1530–1584);
Ivan
Pavlov
(1849–1936),
physiologist;
Ivan
Turgenev
(1818–1883),
novelist;
Ivan
Lendl
(born
1960),
Czech-American
tennis
player;
and
Ivan
Reitman
(1946–2022),
film
director
and
producer.
In
fiction,
the
name
appears
in
characters
such
as
Ivan
Drago,
the
antagonist
in
Rocky
IV
(1985).