| Gender | male | 
|---|---|
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Slavic | 
| Meaning | dobro ("good, goodness") + sława/slava ("glory, fame") | 
| Other names | |
| Variant form(s) | Dobrosława (f), Dobroslava (f), Dobroslavka (f) | 
| Related names | Dobromir, Dobromil | 
| http://www.behindthename.com/name/dobrosl16aw | |
Dobroslav (Cyrillic script: Доброслав) is a Slavic masculine given name which contains two elements: "dobro" - good, goodness and "sława/slava" - glory, fame. The Polish spelling is Dobrosław. Variants include Serbian Dobrosav. The feminine forms are Dobroslava, Dobroslavka, Dobrosława. The name may refer to:
- Stefan Vojislav (fl. 1018 - d. 1043), anachronistically called Dobroslav, Prince of the Serbs
 - Dobroslav II, ruler of Duklja 1101–1102
 - Dobroslav III, ruler of Duklja in 1102
 - Dobrosława Bałazy, from Teatr Polskiego Radia
 - Dobroslav Chrobák, Slovak writer
 - Dobroslav Jevđević, Bosnian Serb politician and Chetnik commander
 - Dobrosav Krstić, retired Serbian footballer of the 1950s and 1960s who was very successful with FC Sochaux-Montbéliard in French Division 1
 - Dobroslav Paraga (9 December 1960), Croatian right-wing politician
 - Dobroslav Trnka (1963-2023), Slovak lawyer
 - Dobrosław Kot, Polish fantasy writer, philosopher, and historian of Polish music folklore
 - Jonatán Dobroslav Čipka, Slovak priest, poet and author
 - Alexey Dobrovolsky, (also known as Dobroslav; 1938-2013) - Soviet dissident, neo-Nazi, and one of the founders of Russian neo-paganism
 
See also
- Slavic names
 - Dobroslav, Ukraine, an urbal locality in Odesa Oblast, Ukraine
 - Dobroslava, a village and municipality in Svidník District, Slovakia
 - Dobrosloveni, a commune in Olt County, Romania
 - Dobroslavtsi, a village in Sofia in western Bulgaria
 
References
External links
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