Wander is used as a Germanic surname and given name, related to wandering or movement.
Wander is far more rooted than its English meaning might suggest. In Brazil and Portugal, Wander is a well-established masculine given name — a Portuguese adaptation of Evander, the Greek hero whose name combines "eu" (good, well) and "aner/andros" (man), rendering it "good man" or "strong man." Evander appears in both Greek and Roman tradition: in Greek myth he was a son of Hermes, and in Virgil's Aeneid he was the king who welcomed Aeneas to the site of future Rome, making him a figure of hospitality, civilization, and cultural transmission.
The phonetic journey from Evander to Wander reflects the fluid way names travel across languages and centuries — consonants shift, syllables compress, and the name lands somewhere new while preserving its essential sound. In Brazilian Portuguese, Wander is spoken with the weight of a proper given name, uncontaminated by the English verb's connotations of aimless roaming. It is a name with direction, lineage, and myth behind it.
For English speakers encountering the name, however, the word-name quality gives it a dreamlike, almost poetic resonance — evoking curiosity, exploration, and open horizons. This layered reading gives Wander a rare cross-cultural appeal: grounded in classical mythology for those who know its origins, and evocatively free-spirited for those who encounter it fresh. Either way, it is a name that moves.