Louis is one of the most regal names in the Western world, worn by eighteen kings of France and radiating centuries of majesty. Its Germanic root Hludwig means 'famous in battle,' and it reaches back to Clovis, the first king of the Franks — Louis and Clovis are, remarkably, the same original name.
Its great patron is Saint Louis IX, the crusader-king celebrated for his justice, piety and charity — the only French king ever canonized, and the namesake of the city of St. Louis, Missouri. From Louis XIV's Versailles to Louis Pasteur's laboratory to Louis Armstrong's trumpet, the name spans royalty, science and jazz with equal ease.
Today Louis is enjoying a stylish revival across Europe and the English-speaking world — courtly yet approachable, vintage yet fresh. It reads as refined and warm, a name with impeccable pedigree that never feels stuffy. Whether pronounced the French 'Loo-ee' or the English 'Lewis,' it carries an effortless, gentlemanly charm.
Louis is the born diplomat with a spine of oak — a personality as balanced and dignified as the name's royal pedigree. The profile leans hard on loyalty (8), stability (8) and diplomacy (8), and that trio paints the picture perfectly: Louis is the steady, courtly presence who keeps the peace, honors his commitments, and can charm a room without ever raising his voice. There's a natural gravitas here, an inherited elegance from eighteen French kings and a canonized saint-monarch famous for justice and fairness.
He carries ambition (7), but it's the noble kind — Louis wants to build something worthy, not merely to win. He'd rather be respected than adored (attention need just 4), and he governs himself with the same measured hand he'd use to govern others. His humor (6) is gently witty, the twinkle of a Louis de Funès or the warm rasp of Louis Armstrong's laugh — refined, never crude.
With moderate energy and sensitivity, Louis isn't the whirlwind or the crier; he's the calm center, the one who thinks before he acts and keeps his counsel. His imagination is practical, his loyalty near-absolute, his stability the kind friends set their watches by. There's a vintage-yet-fresh quality to a modern Louis — old-world manners in a contemporary man, a gentleman who holds doors and holds his ground. In short, Louis is the trustworthy statesman of the friend group: fair-minded, dependable, quietly commanding, and blessed with the rare grace of a leader who never has to shout to be followed.
Playful portrait, for entertainment.
Louis brings the heat of a battlefield to the bedroom, but with the elegance of a king. He doesn’t just kiss; he conquers. Seduction for him is a strategic campaign, where charm is his weapon and intensity his armor. He is drawn to partners who can withstand his fierce loyalty and match his intellectual combat. He craves a muse who challenges him, someone with a spine of steel and a soul of velvet. But beware: his name means "famous warrior," and he expects glory in every encounter. He tires quickly of the passive, the vague, or the emotionally distant. He needs a counterpart who engages in the glorious fray of passion, who meets his gaze with unwavering fire. For Louis, love is not a quiet harbor; it is a vibrant, roaring tournament. He seeks a queen worthy of his crown, a partner who understands that true romance is earned through boldness, depth, and an unyielding commitment to the dramatic, sensual art of winning the heart.
It means 'famous warrior' or 'renowned in battle,' from the Germanic Hludwig.
August 25, the feast of King Louis IX of France.
Louis IX, the 13th-century king of France, a crusader famous for his justice and piety — the only canonized French king.
'Loo-ee' in French; in English it's often 'Lewis,' and both are correct.
Yes — both descend from the same Germanic Hludwig; Clovis is the older French form.
Playful profile, for entertainment.