Irish surname-turned-given name, an anglicization of Ó Buadhacháin, meaning 'descendant of the victorious one.'
Bohan carries deep Irish and biblical roots that wind through two very different traditions. In ancient Ireland, the name derives from the Old Irish *Buadhán*, a diminutive of *buadh* meaning "victory" or "triumph," making it a cousin to the more familiar Buan and Boadhan found in early Gaelic genealogies.
Separately, Bohan appears in the Hebrew scriptures as the name of a Reubenite whose stone served as a territorial landmark between the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, described in the Book of Joshua — a rare Old Testament figure whose name endured only in geography, lending it a quiet, archival dignity. As a surname, Bohan became well-established across County Galway and the West of Ireland, carried by families through the great Irish diaspora of the nineteenth century into America, Australia, and Britain. As a given name it has remained rare, which gives modern bearers a sense of distinctiveness rooted in genuine antiquity rather than invention.
The name sits comfortably in the current trend toward short, strong, two-syllable names with ancient pedigrees — names like Cormac, Ronan, and Declan — yet retains something quieter and less familiar. For families seeking a name with Celtic soul and biblical echo that hasn't been crowded by fashion, Bohan offers an honest, unhurried identity.