Folio § kawa
Kawa
Le forgeron — et, dans la tradition kurde, le héros de la libération
Celui qui éleva la bannière de la liberté
L'histoire du prénom
Kawa was a blacksmith — a man with soot-black hands, neither king nor noble-born. When the tyrant Zahhak's demand for child sacrifices reached his own house, Kawa raised a revolt. His leather apron became a banner — drafş — and the day the tyrant fell became Newroz. To carry the name is to carry the sound of a smith's hammer, and the movement that hammer set in motion.
Étymologie
Racine: Kāva · Middle Persian
The name Kawa descends from Middle Persian Kāva, attested in Ferdowsi's Šāhnāme (c. 1010 CE) and in earlier Sasanian-era references. In the Kurdish reading of the legend, Kawa is the smith whose children were taken by the tyrant Zahhak (also Dehak, Aždahāk) — and who finally led a revolt that ended the tyrant's reign. The day of liberation became Newroz.
Expressions
- Sîwarê Kawa ‘Kawa's rider’ — a poetic figure for someone who carries an inherited fight
Famille du prénom
- Newroz · cognate — the festival born of Kawa's revolt
- Kaveh · cognate — Persian form of the same name
- Drafş · derived — the banner he raised — used as a given name
Parallèles linguistiques
- Kaveh / کاوه Persiska — Same legend, Persian form
- Kavi- Avestiska — Old Iranian title for ‘seer-king’ — a contested but possible deeper root
Mis à jour: 2026-05-01