Candace

//ˈkæn.dɪs// name, noun

name, noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    Alternative letter-case form of candace (a Nubian queen). alt-of

    "Regardless of this treaty, Nubian attacks on Lower Nubia continued and—as was mentioned before—Strabo recorded the attack of a Candace of Kush on Elephantine and Philae, in which the Nubians looted the towns […]"

  2. 2
    Title of any Nubian (Kush) queen or queen mother.

    "Shanakdekhete's namesake was a candace of the 160s B.C.E. who appears to have been the first sole female ruler of Meroe; her name appears on the Meroitic hieroglyphs at Naga, among the earliest examples of Meroitic known."

Proper Noun
  1. 1
    A female given name from Ancient Greek.

    "He aroſe and went on / and beholde a man off ethiopia which was gelded / and of grete auctoꝛite with Candace qune of the ethiopians / which had the rule off all her treaſure / cam to Ieruſalem foꝛ to pꝛaye."

Example

More examples

"He aroſe and went on / and beholde a man off ethiopia which was gelded / and of grete auctoꝛite with Candace qune of the ethiopians / which had the rule off all her treaſure / cam to Ieruſalem foꝛ to pꝛaye."

Etymology

Etymology 1

From Latin Candacē, from Ancient Greek Κανδάκη (Kandákē), from Meroitic 𐦲𐦷𐦲𐦡 (kdke /⁠kandakə⁠/), a hereditary title of ancient queens of Napata (northern Sudan).

Etymology 2

See the entry Candace.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.