Pedro is, quite literally, a name of foundations. It comes from the words Jesus spoke to his apostle Simon: 'You are Peter (rock), and on this rock I will build my Church.' The Aramaic Kefa was translated into Greek as petros and into Latin as Petrus, and so this fisherman from Galilee became the first pope and one of the pillars of Christianity. Few names carry such a direct symbolic weight: solidity, foundation, rock.
Saint Peter's feast day falls on June 29, alongside Saint Paul — a major date on the calendar. St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, the heart of the Catholic Church, bears his name, and Spain has been ruled by numerous Pedros, including King Pedro I of Castile, nicknamed 'the Cruel' or 'the Just,' depending on who tells the story.
Today Pedro retains an unpretentious, noble charm — simple, yet deeply rooted. It has the ring of an honest, trustworthy man, with no airs about him. Its pet form 'Perico' carries a very Spanish warmth — so much so that it's the nickname for a football club — and 'Pedrito' brims with tenderness. A rock-solid classic that never lets you down.
Pedro's character is written right into his name: he is stone, he is rock, he is foundation. The numerological 4 and the Gospel's petros join forces in a personality built on unshakeable stability and loyalty. Pedro is the friend you can always count on, the one who never lets you down, the one who'll still be there in twenty years just as he is today. Simple, honest, and straightforward, he inspires instant trust: you know his word is his word, just like the Galilean fisherman on whom an entire Church was built.
That firmness has a playful flip side. Beneath the apparent seriousness, Pedro hides an earthy, good-natured sense of humor, full of well-timed one-liners and lively after-dinner conversation, very much in the spirit of an Almodóvar or the popular wit behind 'Perico.' He's not a man given to wild flights of fancy: he keeps both feet firmly on the ground, preferring the concrete over the abstract and practical solutions over daydreaming. His energy is steady, built on sustained effort rather than sudden bursts.
Underneath it all lies a quiet sensitivity he reserves for his own people, and a calm independence: he doesn't need to command or shine, but he won't be pushed around either. His ambition is measured — more about doing things well than conquering the world — and his diplomacy is the direct kind, with no beating around the bush. Watch out for his stubbornness once an idea gets stuck in his head: the very firmness that makes him reliable can also make him bullheaded. But he's forgiven everything, because Pedro is, above all, the rock you build on. A safe bet, the kind that never runs out.
Playful portrait, for entertainment.
Pedro loves with the heavy, immovable gravity of a mountain. He does not flirt; he anchors. To seduce him, one must offer a challenge of substance, a spirit that refuses to crumble under his intense, stony gaze. He is drawn to the unyielding, the rare gem hidden in rough terrain, seeking a partner who matches his own internal fortitude. His courtship is not a whirlwind of fleeting passions but a slow, deliberate excavation of the soul, stripping away the superficial to find the bedrock beneath. Once committed, his devotion is absolute, carved in granite, enduring through the harshest weather. He offers a loyalty that is silent but profound, a shelter against the chaos of the world. However, do not mistake his stillness for indifference. Pedro’s affection is deep, tectonic, and potentially devastating if fractured. He is easily bored by the frivolous, the hollow, and the transient. He requires a love that is tangible, real, and built to last centuries, not just seasons. He is the rock upon which you either build a fortress or break your bones.
It means 'stone' or 'rock,' from the Latin Petrus and the Greek petros.
From Jesus's words to his apostle Simon, whom he called Cephas ('rock' in Aramaic), later translated as Petrus.
June 29, the joint feast of Saint Peter and Saint Paul.
A fisherman from Galilee, an apostle of Jesus, and regarded as the first pope of the Catholic Church.
Perico and Pedrito are the most common; Perico is even the popular nickname for the football club RCD Espanyol.
Playful profile, for entertainment.