Masculine given name
Gustav , also spelled Gustaf (pronounced or in English; Swedish: [ˈɡɵ̂sːtav] for both spellings), is a male given name of Old Swedish origin, used mainly in Scandinavian countries, German-speaking countries , and the Low Countries .
The origin of the name is debated. The name was first recorded in 1225 in Västergötland , Sweden, in the Latin form Gostauus . Other 13th-century variants include Gødstaui , Gøstaf and Gøzstaf .[ 1] Linguistic Otto von Friesen suggested that it may derive from a byname meaning "staff of the Göta people " or "support of the (Väst)göta people". Another theory speculates that the name is of Medieval Slavic origin, from Gostislav ,[ 2] a compound word meaning "glorious guest", derived from the Slavic words ghosti ("guest") and slava ("glory"), and was adopted by migrating groups north and west into Germany and Scandinavia .[ 1] [ 3]
This name has been borne by eight kings of Sweden , starting from Gustav Vasa in the 16th century and including the current king, Carl XVI Gustaf . The name has entered other languages as well. In French it is Gustave ; in Italian , Portuguese , and Spanish it is Gustavo . The Latinized form is Gustavus . A side-form of the name in Swedish is Gösta . The name in Finnish is Kustaa , while in Icelandic it is written Gústav or Gústaf .
Gustav (Kustaa) has a name day on June 6 in Swedish and Finnish calendars, in commemoration of Gustav Vasa's election as King of Sweden on June 6, 1523.[ 1]
Royalty and nobility [ edit ]
Gustav I (1496–1560), King of Sweden 1523–1560, whose reign marked the end of the Kalmar Union and the beginning of Swedish independence; founder of the Vasa dynasty
Gustav of Sweden (1568–1607) , son of Eric XIV and Karin Månsdotter
Gustav II Adolf (1594–1632), or Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden 1611–1632, praised military leader during the Thirty Year War , sometimes referred to as the "Father of modern warfare" or "The Lion of the North"
Gustav of Vasaborg , (1616–1653), Swedish noble and military officer
Karl X Gustav (1622–1660), King of Sweden 1654–1660
Gustav III (1746–1792), King of Sweden 1771–1792, who highly influenced the arts of Sweden during the Neo-Classical era and who temporarily reinstated absolute monarchy
Gustav, Prince of Vasa (1799–1877), Crown Prince of Sweden
Gustav IV Adolf (1778–1837), King of Sweden 1792–1809
Prince Gustaf, Duke of Uppland (1827–1852), second son of Oscar I and Josephine of Leuchtenberg
Gustaf V (1858–1950), King of Sweden 1907–1950
Gustaf VI Adolf (1882–1973), King of Sweden 1950–1973
Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten (1906–1947)
Carl XVI Gustaf (born 1946), King of Sweden 1973–
Gustav Åbergsson (1775–1852), Swedish stage actor
Gustav Ahnelöv (born 1996), Swedish ice hockey player
Gustav Elijah Åhr (1996–2017), known as Lil Peep, American rapper and singer
Gustav von Alvensleben (1803–1881), Prussian General of the Infantry
Gustav A. Anderson (1893–1983), American farmer and politician
Gustaf Andersson (1884–1961), Swedish politician
Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer (1836–1870), Spanish poet
Gustav Bauernfeind (1848–1904), German painter famous for his Orientalist paintings
Gustave Biéler (1904–1944), Swiss-born Canadian Special Operations Executive agent during World War II
Gustavo Charif (born 1966), writer, visual artist and film director
Gustave Colin (1814–1880), French politician
Gustave-Henri Colin (1828–1910), French painter
J. P. Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet (1805–1859), German mathematician
Gustav Hesselblad (1906–1989), Swedish military doctor
Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis (1792–1843), scientist for whom the Coriolis effect is named
Gustaf Dalén (1869–1937), Swedish inventor and Nobel Prize laureate
Gustave Doré (1832–1883), French artist, engraver, and illustrator
Gustave Eiffel (1832–1923), French engineer, designer of the Eiffel Tower
Gustav Fechner (1801–1887), German philosopher, physicist, and scientist
Gustav Fehn (1892–1945), German general during World War II
Gustav A. Fischer (1848–1886), German explorer
Gustave Flaubert (1821–1880), French writer best known for Madame Bovary
Gustaf Fröding (1860–1911), Swedish author and poet
Gustav Fröhlich (1902–1987), German actor
Gustaf Gründgens (1899–1963), German actor
Gustav Hamel (1889–1914), British aviation pioneer
Gustav Hareide (born 1950), Norwegian politician
Gustav A. Hedlund (1904–1993), American mathematician
Gustav Heinse (1896–1971) (real name Josef Klein), Bulgarian poet of Austrian origin
Gustav Anders Hemwall (1908–1998), American physician and pioneer in Prolotherapy
Gustav Henriksen (1872–1939), Norwegian businessman
Gustav Ludwig Hertz (1887–1975), German physicist and Nobel Prize laureate
Gustav Heynhold (1800–1860), German botanist
Gustav Holst (1874–1934), British composer
Gustáv Husák (1913–1991), President of Czechoslovakia
Gustav Igler [de ] (1842–1908), German painter
C. Gustav J. Jacobi (1804–1851), German mathematician
Gustav Jäger (naturalist) (1832–1917), German naturalist and doctor
Gustav Jäger (painter) (1808–1871), German painter
Gustav Jäger (physicist) [de ] (1865–1938), Austrian physicist and lecturer
Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961), Swiss psychoanalyst and father of analytical psychology
Gustav Ritter von Kahr (1862–1934), German right-wing politician in Bavaria
Gustaf Kalliokangas (1873–1940), Finnish president
Gustav Kirchhoff (1824–1887), German physicist who contributed to the fundamental understanding of electrical circuits, spectroscopy, and black-body radiation
Gustav Klimt (1862–1918), Austrian symbolist painter of the Vienna Secession
Gustav Knittel (1914–1976), German Waffen-SS officer and convicted war criminal
Gustav Knuth (1901–1987), German actor
Gustav Krklec (1899–1977), Croatian poet
Gustav Landauer (1870–1919), German anarchist philosopher
Gustaf Lantz (born 1981), Swedish politician
Gustaf de Laval (1845–1913), Swedish engineer, inventor and entrepreneur
Gustave Le Bon (1841–1931), French psychologist, sociologist, and physicist
Gustav Leonhardt (1928–2012), Dutch keyboard player, conductor, musicologist, teacher, and editor
Gustave Lyon (1857–1936), French piano maker, inventor and acoustician
Heinrich Gustav Magnus (1802–1870), German chemist and physicist
Gustav Mahler (1860–1911), Austrian composer and conductor
Gustav Meyrink (1868–1932), Austrian author, novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker
Gustave Moreau (1826–1898), French painter
Gustaf Munthe (1896–1962) , Swedish writer, art historian, and art teacher
Gustav Nezval (1907–1998), Czech actor
Gustav Noske (1868–1946), German Minister of Defence
Gustav Adolf Nosske (1902–1990), German SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator
Gustav Nyquist (born 1989), Swedish professional hockey player
Gustav Otto (1883–1926), German aircraft and aircraft-engine designer and manufacturer
Oscar Gustave Rejlander , pioneering Victorian art photographer and an expert in photomontage
Gustav Rochlitz (1889–1972), German art dealer
Gustav Scanzoni von Lichtenfels (1855–1924), German general
Gustav Schäfer (rower) (1906–1991), German Olympic rower
Gustav Schäfer (drummer) (born 1988), German drummer (Tokio Hotel )
Gustav Schickedanz (1895–1977), German entrepreneur
Gustav A. Schneebeli (1853–1923), U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania
Gustav Schröder (1885–1959), German sea captain
Gustav Schwarzenegger (1907–1972), Austrian police chief and Nazi German military officer
Gustaf Skarsgård (born 1980), Swedish actor
Gustav Spörer (1822–1895), German astronomer
Gustav Stickley (1858–1942), American furniture maker, invented the Mission style of Craftsman furniture
Gustav Sule (1910–1942), Estonian javelin thrower
Gustavus von Tempsky (1828–1868), Anglo-Prussian explorer and adventurer in New Zealand Wars
Gustav Vigeland (1869–1943), Norwegian sculptor
Gustaf Welin (1930–2008), Swedish Army lieutenant general
Gustave Whitehead (1874–1927), German-American aviator
Gustav Wood, vocalist in British rock band Young Guns
Gustavs Zemgals (1871–1939), Latvian president 1927–1930
Gustav Zeuner (1828–1907), German physicist and engineer
Gustave de Molinari (1819–1912), Belgian political economist
^ a b c "Namnen Gustav Vasa och Vasaloppet" . Institutet för språk och folkminnen (in Swedish). Retrieved 2025-01-24 .
^ Gösta, Holm (1974). "Namnet Gustav" . Namn och bygd: Tidskrift för nordisk ortnamnsforskning . 62 : 62– 77.
^ Sveriges medeltida personnamn: ordbok. Bd 2 H. 9: Förnamn, F-Hanok, Gunnur-Hakon (in Swedish). Uppsala: Arkivet för ordbok över Sveriges medeltida personnamn. 1990. pp. 527– 571. ISBN 91-88096-00-9 .