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Dvir is a personal name and toponym with origins in the Levant, appearing across historical records, modern scholarship, and cultural media. The name has been associated with individuals in religious texts, contemporary figures in academia and the arts, geographic localities, and scientific nomenclature. Its occurrences intersect with studies of linguistics, archaeology, and modern media.
The etymology of the name appears in studies of Semitic languages, where comparative analyses reference Hebrew language, Aramaic language, Ugaritic language, Phoenician language and inscriptions catalogued by researchers at institutions such as the Israel Antiquities Authority, the British Museum, the Louvre, and the Vatican Library. Philologists draw on corpora collected by projects at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Oxford University, University of Cambridge, Tel Aviv University and the Institut français du Proche-Orient to compare roots attested in biblical manuscripts like the Masoretic Text, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Septuagint. Lexical analyses reference works by scholars affiliated with the Jewish Publication Society, the Encyclopaedia Judaica, the American Oriental Society, and the Society of Biblical Literature, as well as comparative grammars from University of Chicago Press and Brill Publishers.
Individuals bearing the name occur in fields such as theology, music, science, and sports, and are discussed in biographies held by archives at the National Library of Israel, the Library of Congress, the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and the British Library. Biographical entries appear in databases maintained by IMDb, ORCID, ResearchGate, WorldCat, and Scopus and are cited in periodicals including Haaretz, The Jerusalem Post, The New York Times, The Guardian and Le Monde. Notable persons with the name have affiliations with universities including Harvard University, Columbia University, Stanford University, University of Oxford and Yale University and have participated in events at venues like the Royal Albert Hall, the Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, the Carnegie Hall and the Sydney Opera House.
The name is attached to several locales and sites referenced in archaeological surveys and geographic gazetteers compiled by the Survey of Western Palestine, the Palestine Exploration Fund, the Israel Meteorological Service, the Geological Survey of Israel and mapping projects at Google Maps, the United Nations, the US Geological Survey and the Ordnance Survey. Place-names appear in regional studies published by the Hebrew Union College, the École Biblique, the American Schools of Oriental Research, and referenced in travel accounts by Mark Twain, T. E. Lawrence, Gertrude Bell, E. M. Forster and James Silk Buckingham.
The name figures in discussions of ancient Israelite religion, Near Eastern ritual practices, and Second Temple period studies found in works by William F. Albright, Israel Finkelstein, Amihai Mazar, Nadav Na'aman and Emanuel Tov. It is invoked in analyses alongside texts such as the Book of Judges, the Book of Samuel, Deuteronomy, and apocryphal collections studied in seminars at the American Academy of Religion, the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, the Israel Antiquities Authority and the British Academy. Historians situate references within broader events like the Assyrian conquest of the Kingdom of Israel, the Babylonian captivity, the Hasmonean dynasty, the Roman Province of Judaea and the Byzantine Empire and in iconographic research hosted by the Israel Museum, the Pergamon Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Smithsonian Institution.
The name appears in scientific literature in taxonomy, geospatial datasets, and laboratory authorship indexed in PubMed, NASA, European Space Agency, National Institutes of Health, Google Scholar and the Royal Society. Researchers affiliated with Weizmann Institute of Science, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology and the Max Planck Society have used the name in author lists, specimen labels, or site designations in reports on archaeology of the Levant, paleobotany, geochronology, remote sensing and bioinformatics published by Nature, Science (journal), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and PLoS ONE.
The name has been used for characters, settings, and titles in film, television, literature, and music, referenced in databases such as IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, AllMusic, Goodreads and Discogs. Creators and performers associated with the name have appeared at festivals and broadcasters like the Cannes Film Festival, the Sundance Film Festival, the Berlin International Film Festival, BBC Television and Netflix, and are discussed in cultural criticism published in Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, Pitchfork, The New Yorker and Rolling Stone.
Category:Hebrew names Category:Toponyms