Jordi
Jordi (Catalan pronunciation: ['ʒɔɾ.di]) is the Catalan form of the ancient Greek name Georgios. Jordi is a popular name in Catalonia and is also given in the Netherlands and in Spanish-, English- and German-speaking countries.
Jordi may also refer to:
Sant Jordi – patron saint of Aragon and Catalonia
La Diada de Sant Jordi – Catalan holiday held on April 23 with similarities to Valentine's Day, traditionally men give women roses and women give men a book to celebrate the occasion.
People
Academics and business
- Jordi Canals – economist and former business school dean
 - Jordi Galí – macroeconomist, professor, and author
 - Jordi Guimet – information engineer and pioneer in geographic systems
 - Jordi Montana – industrial design expert and Rector of the University of Vic
 - Jordi Nadal – economist and historian
 - Jordi Ustrell Aguilà – computer engineer and pioneer of Internet banking
 
Activism
Art and media
- Jordi Bernet – Spanish comics artist who used Jordi as a pseudonym in the 60s and 70s
 - Jordi Bonet – Spanish-born Canadian painter, ceramist, muralist, and sculptor
 - Jordi Caballero – movie and television actor, dancer, choreographer and producer
 - Jordi Davieson – lead vocals and guitar for Australian four-piece indie pop band San Cisco
 - Jordi Galceran – Spanish playwright and author
 - Jordi James – lead singer of the British band Sugarthief
 - Jordi Mollà – Spanish-born actor, filmmaker, writer, and artist
 - Jordi Morgan – radio and television broadcaster in Nova Scotia, Canada
 - Jordi El Niño Polla (born 1994), Spanish pornographic actor
 - Jordi Palacios, fictional character in Red Band Society (TV series)
 - Jordi Roca – pastry chef of the restaurant El Celler de Can Roca
 - Jordi Vilasuso – Cuban-American actor
 - Jordi Webber – member of New Zealand band Titanium
 - Jordi Savall – Spanish violist
 
Military and politics
- Jordi Cuixart – president of Òmnium Cultural, which preserves and promotes Catalan culture
 - Jordi Darmstadt – Prince George Louis of Hessen-Darmstadt, Field Marshal in the Austrian army
 - Jordi Farragut – United States Navy officer during the American Revolutionary War
 - Jordi Font Mariné (born 1955), Andorran politician
 - Jordi Hereu – former mayor of Barcelona
 - Jordi Pujol – former president of Catalonia
 - Jordi Salvador (born 1964), Spanish Catalan politician
 - Jordi Sànchez i Picanyol – president of the Catalan National Assembly, an organization promoting Catalan independence
 
Sport
- Jordi Aláez – Andorran footballer
 - Jordi Alba – Spanish football player for Inter Miami and the Spain national football team
 - Jordi Aluja – Spanish football coach
 - Jordi Amat (footballer) – Indonesian footballer
 - Jordi Bitter – Dutch footballer
 - Jordi Codina – professional footballer who plays for Getafe CF as a goalkeeper
 - Jordi Cruyff – Dutch football player and son of Johan Cruyff
 - Jordi Fernández - Spanish basketball coach
 - Jordi Gómez – Spanish professional footballer who plays for Sunderland
 - Jordi Figueras Montel – Spanish footballer commonly known as Jordi
 - Jordi Hoogstrate – retired Dutch footballer
 - Jordi Masip – goalkeeper for Real Valladolid
 - Jordi Murphy – Barcelona-born Irish rugby player
 - Jordi Pasqualin – English rugby player
 - Jordi Puig – Spanish basketball player
 - Jordi Roura – Spanish former football player and current FC Barcelona academy
 - Jordi Tarrés (footballer) (born 1981), Spanish and Hong Kong footballer
 - Jordi Tarrés (motorcycle trials rider) - Spanish trials rider
 - Jordi Tur (born 1998), Spanish professional footballer
 - Jordi Valadon – Australian professional footballer
 - Jordi van Gelderen – Dutch professional footballer
 - Jordi Vanlerberghe – Belgian professional footballer
 - Jordi Xumetra – professional footballer who plays for Real Zaragoza
 
In popular culture
- Jordi (album), a 2021 album by Maroon 5
 - Jordi Palacios – character played by Nolan Sotillo on FOX comedy-drama Red Band Society
 - Jordi's Star – children's book by author Alma Flor Ada
 - Palau Sant Jordi – the main indoor sporting arena in Barcelona, Spain