A Persian-influenced Turkish wind-name meaning north or north-east wind, carrying a natural weather meaning.
Poyraz is a Turkish masculine given name meaning the north-northeast wind — specifically the cold, powerful gale that sweeps down from the Black Sea across the Bosphorus and the Anatolian plateau. The word itself derives from the ancient Greek *Boreas*, the god of the north wind in Greek mythology, filtered through Byzantine and Ottoman Turkish phonology over more than a millennium. Boreas was feared and respected in antiquity as a divine force capable of freezing rivers and driving ships off course; his Turkish inheritor carries that same elemental weight.
In Turkish maritime culture, the Poyraz is a defining meteorological presence — fishermen on the Bosphorus have read its arrival for centuries as a signal to seek harbor, and Istanbul neighborhoods facing the strait speak of the *poyraz rüzgarı* with the familiarity reserved for a difficult but respected neighbor. The wind appears frequently in Turkish folk poetry and proverbs, associated with bracing clarity, sudden change, and the kind of cold that sharpens the mind. Giving a child this name is an act of poetic ambition: you are naming someone after a force of nature.
As a given name, Poyraz has grown steadily in popularity in Turkey over the past two decades, particularly among parents seeking names that are unmistakably Turkish in character yet rooted in a cosmopolitan classical heritage that links Anatolia to ancient Greece. It is bold and monosyllabic in feel despite its three syllables, and it ages remarkably well — fitting equally on a child running into cold surf and an adult whose presence enters a room the way a wind does, ahead of itself.