A Persian name, or an Iranian name, consists of a given name (Persian: ÃÂçàNâm), sometimes more than one, and a surname (ÃÂçàâ îçÃÂÃÂçïïÃÂ).
Many Persian names are attested in the Old Persian language and originate in the Achaemenid period, such as Dariosh, Koroush, Setareh, and Apameh. Since the Muslim conquest of Persia, some names in Iran have been derived from Arabic, although the majority are Persian in origin. Persian Christians have Arabic names indistinguishable from those of their Muslim neighbours, except for some explicitly Islamic names such as Mohammad, which are not usually borne by Christians. They can also use Arabic derivations of Christian names (such as saints' names), or Greek, Neo-Aramaic, or Armenian names, as most Christian Iranians are Iranian Armenians, although there are also Iranian Assyrians and Iranian Georgians. Iranian Zoroastrians have names of Avestan or Old Persian origin, such as Atossa, Esfandyar and Goshtasp.
Many Persian names originate from the Persian literature book, the Shahnameh or "Epic of Kings". It was composed in the 10th century by Ferdowsi and is considered by many to be the masterpiece of Persian literature. Approximately 10%-15% of all Persian names are from Shahnameh. A few examples are Abtin, Amad, Ardeshir, Arjang, Babak, Barzin, Bizhan, Bozorgmehr, Dana (Zana), Darab, Esfandiar, Javid, Faramarz, Fariborz and Farshid.
Before 1919, the Iranian people did not use surnames. An act of the Vosugh od-Dowleh government in 1919 introduced the use of surnames, and the practice expanded during the reign of Reza Shah (r. 1925âÂÂ1941). Reza Shah passed a law making it mandatory to have surnames. He himself chose Pahlavi as his surname, a name with Sasanian era roots. Before that, a person was often told apart from others by a combination of prefixes and suffixes attached to his or her name. If it were omitted, that person might be taken for someone else. Since the adoption of surnames, Ahmadi has become the most popular surname in Iran.
Many Iranian families adopted surnames derived from occupations, titles, or social roles. For example, the surname Moazenzadeh (literally âÂÂdescendant of a muezzinâÂÂ) reflects this tradition, and is notably borne by Salim and Rahim Moazenzadeh Ardabili, both sons of Karim Moazzen Zadeh Ardabili and celebrated Iranian Quran reciters and muezzins.
In many cases people were known by the name of the district, city, town, or even the village from which they came by using the locality's name as a suffix, for example: Mahabadi, Mazandarani, Kordestani, Lahijani, Lajani, Tehrani, Esfahani, Gilani, Hamedani, Yazdi, Ardabili, and Shirazi. The same rule is followed for the many millions of Iranians who have surnames of regions or cities of the Caucasus region. The latter was forcefully ceded in the course of the 19th century to Imperial Russia through the Treaty of Gulistan (1813) and Treaty of Turkmenchay (1828). Examples of common Iranian surnames in this regard are Daghestani, Qarabaghi, Darbandi, Shirvani, Iravani, Nakhjevani, and Lankarani.
Among many other secularisation and modernisation reforms, surnames were enforced by Reza Shah, following similar contemporary patterns in Turkey under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, and later in Egypt under G. Nasser.
Note: Some of the names below are of Middle Persian origin
Most of these refer to Muslim titles or roles in branches of Shia Islam