Kwame
Kwame is an Akan masculine given name among the Akan people in Ghana which is given to a boy born on Saturday. Traditionally in Ghana, a child would receive their Akan day name during their Outdooring, eight days after birth.
According to Akan tradition, people born on particular days exhibit certain characteristics or attributes. Kwame has the appellation "Atoapoma" or "Oteanankannuro" meaning "combat ready".
The day naming tradition in Ghana extends to folk characters such as Anansi and deities. Traditional Akan religion states that God created himself on Saturday and is therefore also named "Kwame".
Origin and meaning of Kwame
In the Akan culture, day names are derived from deities. Kwame originated from Koyame and the Akan day name God. The name Kwame means extremes in fortune, health and spirituality; versatile, idealistic and intuitive. Males named Kwame are reputed to be talented and good problem solvers.Male variants of Kwame
Variant spellings include Kwamé, Kouamé, Kwami, Kwamena, and Kwamina, according to the various Akan subgroups. It is spelt Kwame by the Akuapem, Akyem, Bono and Ashanti subgroups, while the Fante subgroup spell it as Kwamena or Kwamina.Female version of Kwame
In the Akan culture and other local cultures in Ghana, day names come in pairs for males and females. The variant of the name used for a female child born on Saturday is Ama.Notable people with the name
The most well-known bearer of the name was Kwame Nkrumah, President of Ghana and a founder of Pan-Africanism – mainly due to whom the name spread also to non-Ghanaians.People with this name include:
- Kwamé
- Kwame
- Kwame Alexander, American author
- Kwame Ampadu, Irish footballer
- Kwame Anthony Appiah, a Ghanaian-British philosopher of semantics and racism
- Kwame Awuah, Canadian soccer player
- Kwame Brown, American former basketball player
- Kwame R. Brown, American politician
- Kwame Dawes, Ghanaian poet currently living in America, managing editor of the Prairie Schooner literary journal
- Kwame Evans Jr., American basketball player
- Kwame Harris, former American football player
- Kwame Holman, American producer, correspondent, and congressional correspondent
- Kwame Kenyatta, an American politician
- Kwame Kilpatrick, former mayor of Detroit, Michigan
- Kwame Nkrumah, a Ghanaian politician and one of the founders of Pan-Africanism
- Kwame Onwuachi, American chef
- Kwame Raoul, Illinois Attorney General
- Kwame Somburu, an American socialist political activist
- Kwame Tucker, a Bermudian cricketer
- Kwame Ture, an American civil rights activist
- Kwame Vaughn, American basketball player for Maccabi Haifa in the Israeli Basketball National League
- Kwamena Bartels, a Ghanaian politician and former government minister of the New Patriotic Party
- Kwamena Ahwoi, a Ghanaian politician who served as Minister for Local Government and Rural Development from 1990 to 2001 and Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1997
- Kwamina Ropapa Mensah, a Ghanaian footballer who plays for Nashville SC in the USL Championship
- Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, American author
- Osei Kwame Panyin, eighteenth-century leader of the Ashanti Confederacy, in what is southern and central Ghana today
- Paul Kwame, Ghanaian footballer
- Zohran Kwame Mamdani, New York state assemblyman and Mayor of New York City
Fictional character
- Kwame, a fictional character in the animated television series Captain Planet and the Planeteers
- Kwame, a fictional character in British television series I May Destroy You.
Category:Ashanti given names
Category:Akan given names
Category:Masculine given names
Category:Saturday
Category:African masculine given names