There weren't necessarily 3 wise men. There were only 3 gifts. There could have been 1 million wise men. No names were given in The Bible though.
Later traditions give them the names Balthasar, Caspar, and Melchior.
The "magi", the "Three Kings", or the "Kings From the East". According to documents from the later Greek, their names were * Gaspar, * Melchior * Balthasar
The names of the three wise men are not mentioned in the Bible. Traditional names for the wise men are Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar, a tradition from Western Christian culture. The story of the Magi visiting Jesus is found in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 2, but their names are not given in the biblical text.
We don't even know for sure that there were three, let alone what their names were, so the "meaning of their names" is, well, meaningless.
Unless we rely on the Bible, everything is speculation, and the Bible does not mention horses.Incidentally, Matthew's Gospel only tells us that there were three gifts, but does not tell us there were exactly three wise men. In fact the very existence of the wise men of Matthew's Gospel is open to doubt.
Their names are not given in the Bible. Nor does it say that there were three of them. The Gospel of Matthew states that wise men came bearing gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. The three gifts have given rise to the idea that there were three wise men.
Kasper, Balthesar, & Malcior
The Three Wise Men were - according to tradition - Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar.
The names of the three wise men are not mentioned in the Bible. Instead, they are commonly known as Melchior, Caspar, and Balthazar in Western tradition. These names were introduced in the 6th century by a Greek manuscript called Excerpta Latina Barbari.
The names of the wisemen are not mentioned in the bible.
Matthew's gospel doesn't say there were three wise men; that idea took hold because they were said to present three gifts. The number of men isn't specified.
The story of the magi is found in the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament of the Bible. It recounts the visit of the Magi, or the Three Wise Men, to the infant Jesus after his birth.
Matthew, in Chapter 2.
The three wise men, "The Magi".According to Christianity, the three wise men followed the star to Bethlehem. The three wise men traveled to witness the birth of the boy called the son of God.