Philip is a name with pedigree in the fullest sense. From the Greek Philippos, 'lover of horses', it was borne by Macedonian kings, above all Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, long before it became a Christian staple. Its enduring popularity in the West owes most to Philip the Apostle, one of the Twelve, celebrated alongside James on 3 May.
Across the centuries the name has crowned kings of Spain, France and beyond, and it carries an unmistakable air of dignity and continuity, reinforced in modern times by Britain's Prince Philip. It is a name that sounds measured, educated and quietly authoritative.
Today Philip (or Phillip) reads as a timeless classic: never trendy, never dated, always in good standing. It projects reliability and old-world class without stuffiness, softening easily into the friendly Phil. It is the choice of parents who want something dignified and unshakeably established, a name that has already proven it can last two and a half thousand years.
Philip is dignity in human form. His trait profile is anchored by exceptional stability (8) and firm loyalty (7), and the picture that emerges is of a composed, principled man who is not easily rattled and even harder to sway once he has decided what he stands for. There is a regal steadiness to him that fits a name worn by kings of Macedon, Spain and France, and by the famously unflappable Prince Philip.
He is reserved by nature. Low on flamboyance (fantaisie 3) and openly displayed sensitivity (4), and wanting remarkably little attention (besoin d'attention 3), Philip keeps his inner life behind a calm, courteous exterior. He is not cold, just contained; his warmth shows in reliability and dry wit rather than effusiveness. That reserve pairs with real ambition (7) and shrewd diplomacy (7): Philip is the strategist in the room, the one who has already thought three moves ahead while everyone else is still talking.
The name's classical, never-trendy aura reinforces all of this. Philip means 'lover of horses' and carries an air of old-world education and understated authority, the vibe of a man equally at home with the works of Philip Glass or a Philip K. Dick paperback, thoughtful, cultured, a little private. His independence (7) means he does not fish for approval; he holds his positions on principle. At his best, Philip is the quiet pillar people underestimate at their peril: measured, learned, deeply loyal to his few, and possessed of a two-thousand-year sense that some things are worth doing properly and slowly. Not the loudest man in the room, but very often the one who turns out to be right.
Playful portrait, for entertainment.
Philip approaches romance with the untamed grace of a stallion breaking from the stable. His name, a lover of horses, manifests in his passion: intense, spirited, and deeply physical. He does not flirt; he gallops. In love, he is a creature of instinct and raw magnetism, drawn to partners who possess a wild, untamable spirit. He seeks a muse who can match his energetic stride, someone with a fierce independence that challenges his own dominance.
Seduction for Philip is an art of pursuit. He charms with a confident, earthy sensuality, his gaze holding the steady warmth of a summer sun. He craves authenticity and vigor, repelled by fragility or overly refined pretension. Once committed, he is fiercely loyal, yet his heart remains free-spirited, needing space to run. He will not bind his partner, but he will inspire them to fly. However, beware: if the spark fades or the partner becomes too tame, Philip may lose interest swiftly. He needs a challenge, a wild beauty that keeps his blood pumping. For Philip, love is not a cage; it is an open field where two strong souls run side by side, breathless and alive.
It means 'lover of horses', from the Greek philos (loving) and hippos (horse).
Philip the Apostle, one of the Twelve. In the Western Church his feast is 3 May, shared with the apostle James the Less.
3 May in the Roman Catholic calendar. The Eastern churches commemorate him on 14 November.
Both exist. Philip (one L) is the older, more traditional spelling; Phillip with two L's is a common variant.
Very much so — it was borne by kings of Macedon, Spain and France, and by Britain's Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Playful profile, for entertainment.