Iraj is a Persian name from epic tradition, borne by a prince in the Shahnameh.
Iraj is a name of ancient Persian origin, one of the great mythological names of the Iranian tradition recorded in Ferdowsi's *Shahnameh* (Book of Kings), the tenth-century Persian epic that is one of the longest poems ever written and the foundational work of Persian literature. In the *Shahnameh*, Iraj is the youngest and most virtuous son of the king Fereidun, a figure of extraordinary nobility who is murdered by his jealous brothers Salm and Tur after he generously offers to divide his kingdom with them. Iraj's martyrdom — he dies not fighting but forgiving — made him a symbol of selfless virtue and tragic innocence in Persian cultural memory, a figure comparable in moral weight to Abel in the Abrahamic tradition.
The name's etymology connects it to the Old Iranian *Airya*, the same root that gives us the word "Iran" (land of the Aryans, in the ancient ethnolinguistic sense) and that echoes through Zoroastrian religious texts. Bearing this name is thus a quiet act of cultural continuity, linking a living person to the deepest layers of Iranian civilization. In modern Iran and among the Persian diaspora worldwide, Iraj is a name that carries both literary prestige and a gentle, almost melancholy beauty.
It is not a name of power or ambition — it is a name of goodness. Famous modern bearers include the beloved Iranian poet Iraj Mirza, whose early-twentieth-century work blended classical Persian forms with sharp social satire. For Iranian families outside Iran, choosing Iraj is often a deliberate act of cultural preservation, a way of keeping the *Shahnameh* alive in a new generation and a new country.