Generated by GPT-5-mini| Reda | |
|---|---|
| Name | Reda |
| Settlement type | Town |
| Subdivision type | Country |
| Subdivision type1 | Voivodeship |
| Subdivision type2 | County |
| Established title | Founded |
Reda is a name shared by people, places, cultural artifacts, and organizations across multiple regions and languages. It appears as a surname, given name, toponym, institutional title, and lexical item in Arabic, Polish, Indonesian, and other linguistic environments. The term surfaces in historical records, contemporary media, and geographical registries, intersecting with figures, cities, works, and institutions of global significance.
The name appears in Semitic and Slavic onomastic traditions. In Arabic anthroponymy it is related to notions found in names like Abd al-Rida and terms appearing in classical literature associated with figures such as Ibn Sina and Al-Farabi. In North African Arabic-speaking contexts the form recurs alongside names borne by participants in events involving entities like Algerian War of Independence and figures linked to Habib Bourguiba. In South Asia and Southeast Asia the element resembles names appearing in biographies related to Muhammad Iqbal-era intellectuals and modern politicians connected to Pakistan and Indonesia. In Slavic contexts the toponym surfaces within regional placenames referenced in sources tied to Pomeranian Voivodeship, administrative records associated with Gdańsk County, and cartographic materials used by historians studying the Partitions of Poland.
As a personal name it identifies artists, athletes, politicians, and scholars whose careers intersect with major institutions and events. Notable bearers have engaged with organizations such as FIFA-affiliated football clubs, cultural institutions linked to the Cairo Opera House, and academic faculties at universities comparable to Cairo University and Jagiellonian University. Some individuals with this name have appeared in international competitions under bodies like the International Olympic Committee and regional tournaments organized by confederations such as UEFA and AFC. Others have contributed to literature and journalism appearing in outlets akin to Al-Ahram, The New York Times, and Le Monde or have collaborated with filmmakers whose work screened at festivals like Cannes Film Festival and Venice Film Festival. Political figures with the name have interacted with parties and offices connected to institutions such as Parliament of Egypt, Knesset, Sejm of the Republic of Poland, and executive branches in countries represented at United Nations assemblies.
As a placename it designates urban and rural localities. Examples occur in northern Europe where the name features in municipal records allied with administrative units comparable to Gdynia and Sopot, and in topographical surveys produced by agencies like national mapping offices. It also appears in Middle Eastern and North African gazetteers alongside settlements documented in colonial-era archives of French Algeria and Ottoman registers preserved in collections related to Istanbul University manuscripts. In Southeast Asia the name occurs in place-lists connected to provincial administrations similar to Jakarta-area registry systems and in toponymic studies involving scholars from institutions such as Universitas Indonesia.
The name is present in creative spheres: musicians, visual artists, and filmmakers whose works have been exhibited in venues associated with institutions like the British Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and regional galleries connected to the Arab Museum of Modern Art. Composers and performers bearing the name have collaborated with orchestras and ensembles comparable to the Cairo Symphony Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic, and chamber groups appearing at festivals such as WOMAD and Montreux Jazz Festival. Writers and poets with the name have produced works translated by publishers with profiles similar to Penguin Random House and Bloomsbury, and their texts have been critiqued in journals akin to Poetry and Granta.
The name functions as a corporate and institutional label for companies, nonprofits, and clubs. Entities carrying the name operate in sectors including shipping and logistics comparable to firms registered with the International Maritime Organization, sports clubs affiliated with national federations like the Polish Football Association, and cultural NGOs partnering with UNESCO programs. Other organizations using the name have registered trademarks and trade names in commercial registries similar to the European Union Intellectual Property Office and have engaged in international trade governed by agreements such as the WTO framework.
In Arabic lexicons the element corresponds to roots and morphologies discussed in classical grammars by scholars like Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi and features in modern dictionaries edited by academies such as the Academy of the Arabic Language in Cairo. In Polish-language usage the term appears in official orthographies overseen by bodies akin to the Polish Language Council and in cartographic nomenclature issued by national statistical offices comparable to Statistics Poland. Linguistic studies referencing the name have been published in journals similar to Journal of Sociolinguistics and Language and have been cited in comparative research housed at centers like the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics.
Category:Place name disambiguation