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・ Jimena Díaz
・ Jimena Elías
・ Jimena Espinoza
・ Jimena Fama
・ Jimena Florit
・ Jimena Hoyos
・ Jimena Lindo
・ Jimena Romero
・ Jimena, Spain
・ Jimenez Arms
・ Jimenez Church
・ Jimenez Lai
・ Jimenez Novia
・ Jimenez v. Quarterman
・ Jimenez, Misamis Occidental
Jimeno
・ Jimeno Garcés of Pamplona
・ Jimeno of Pamplona
・ Jimeoin
・ Jimeoin (TV series)
・ Jimera de Líbar
・ Jimerson
・ Jimerson Town, New York
・ Jimeta
・ Jimi
・ Jimi Agbaje
・ Jimi Bani
・ Jimi Beach
・ Jimi Bertucci
・ Jimi Blue Ochsenknecht


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Jimeno : ウィキペディア英語版
Jimeno
Jimeno (also Ximeno, Chemene, Exemeno) is a given name derived from ''Ximen'',〔OMAECHEVARRIA, Ignacio, "Nombres propios y apellidos en el País Vasco y sus contornos". ''Homenaje a D. Julio de Urquijo'', volume II, pages 153-175.〕 a variant of the medieval Basque given name Semen, the origins of which arose in the Basque regions, then its use spread west across northern Spain into Castile and Galicia, then followed the Reconquista south during medieval times. It was frequently recorded in Latin using orms similar to those used for Simon, but this is probably not indicative of shared derivation.
==History==
Someone named "Seguin" was attested in Frankish chronicles when referring to the Count ofemens Bordeaux and Duke of Vasconia (778, 814 and 816). The name is also recorded as Sihiminus, perhaps a misspelling of ''Ximinus'', may have been a local Basque whose family later fled south over the Pyrenees and helped Enneco Arista take over in Pamplona.
Another character is identified in 778 as "''Jimeno, the strong''", from Arab sources in Al-Andalus, where it calls him "''Mothmin al-Akra''", a Basque or Hispanic magnate in the upper Ebro territories within the later independent principality of Navarre. This person was possibly related to others near Pamplona in local opposition to both the invading Franks under Charlemagne and the new ruler of the Islamic Iberian realm, Abd al-Rahman I.
Some think the name may be a corruption of the later part of the Latin name ''Ma-ximinus'', as there is late Classic records that various individuals with this name were becoming very active as officials and residents in upper Hispania near the Pyrenees and Tarraconensis during the last century of the Western Roman Empire, and perhaps into the transition from imperial province to independent Kingdom during the Visigothic rule.

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