Leila (name)


Leila is a feminine given name in the Semitic and Persian languages.
Etymologically the word comes from proto-semitic layl-, which gives לֵילְיָא in Aramaic, לילה in Hebrew, لَيْل or لَيْلَة in Arabic, and ܠܹܠܝܵܐ in Syriac.
In Hebrew and Arabic the word Leila or Laila means "night", "dark" and the name is often given to girls born during the night, signifying "daughter of the night".
In Judaism, the identification of the word "night" as the name of an angel originates with the interpretation of "Rabbi Yochanan" who read "At night and his servants deployed against them and defeated them" as "by night".
The story of Qays and Layla or Layla and Majnun is based on the romantic poems of Qais Ibn Al-Mulawwah in 7th century Arabia, who was nicknamed Majnoon Layla, Arabic for "madly in love with Layla", referring to his cousin Layla Al-Amiriah. His poems are considered the paragon of unrequited chaste love. They later became a popular romance in medieval Iran, and use of the name spread accordingly. The name gained popularity further afield in the Muslim world, amongst Turkic peoples and in the Balkans and India. Variant spellings include Laela, Laelah, Laila, Layla, Leïla, Leighla, Lejla and Leyla.
In the Nordic countries, Laila or Lajla is derived from the Sami name Láilá, the Sami variant of Helga which means holy.

People with this name

Laila