Proto-celtic Names

Proto-celtic names belong to the Proto-celtic language tradition. This collection contains 194 Proto-celtic names with their meanings, cultural backgrounds, and pronunciation guides. You'll find 73 names traditionally given to boys and 119 names for girls, reflecting naming patterns from regions where Proto-celtic is spoken. These names carry the linguistic heritage and cultural values of Proto-celtic-speaking communities. Common themes include noble, beautiful, warrior, showing what Proto-celtic cultures have valued across generations.

194 total names
73 boy names
119 girl names

Gwendolyn

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos” (white, fair) plus “dolen” (ring, bow, hair, brow). The name means “fair bow, blessed ring, white ring, who has white eyelashes.” Saint Gwen Teirbron (French: Blanche; Latin: Alba trimammis or candida) was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn Ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the wild hunt.

Girl

Gwendoline

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos” (white, fair) plus “dolen” (ring, bow, hair, brow). The name means “fair bow, blessed ring, white ring, who has white eyelashes.” Saint Gwen Teirbron (French: Blanche; Latin: Alba trimammis or candida) was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn Ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the wild hunt.

Girl

Jyn

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Neva

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gaël

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Gwen

Gwen is a short form of Gwendolen, Gwenllian, Gweneth, Gwenith, Gwenneth, and Gwenyth. It is of Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENDOLEN) (GWENLLIAN) and (GWYNEDD).

Girl

Veva

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Jena

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Bron

It is a Welsh feminine given name. It is closely associated with the similar name Branwen, which appears in medieval Welsh literature. The name is composed of two Proto-Brythonic elements: from the Welsh “bron,” From Proto-Brythonic *bronnā (breast, womb), and the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair, blessed).

Girl

Naël

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Wite

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Gwin

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair). Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt.

Boy

Jenn

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gwyn

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair). Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt.

Boy

Genny

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gwenn

Gwenn is a short form of Gwendolen, Gwenllian, Gweneth, Gwenith, Gwenneth, and Gwenyth. It is of Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENDOLEN) (GWENLLIAN) and (GWYNEDD).

Girl

Gwynn

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair). Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt.

Boy

Gawen

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Jenni

Jenni is a diminutive of Jane, Eugenia and a short form of Jennifer. It is of Hebrew, Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, Cornish and Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (IŌÁNNĒS) (GWENHWŸFAR) and (EUGÉNIOS).

Girl

Gavin

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Jenny

Jenny is a diminutive of Jane, Eugenia, Jennifer and a variation of Jenni and Jeanne. It is of Hebrew, Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, Cornish, Greek origin and comes from the following roots: (IŌÁNNĒS) (GWENHWŸFAR) and (EUGÉNIOS).

Girl

Winny

Winny is a diminutive of Edwina, Winifred, Winnifred, Gwendolyn, Guinevere, and Gwyneth. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon), Germanic, Proto-Celtic, Welsh and Cornish origin and comes from the roots: (EDWIN) (WINFRIÐ) (GWENDOLEN) (GWENHWŸFAR) and (GWYNEDD).

Unisex

Jenae

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Genia

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Żenia

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Jenji

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gavan

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawan

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawyn

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawin

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gaven

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawne

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gwenda

Gwenda is a feminine given name of Welsh origin. It was apparently coined in the 20th-century using the Welsh adjectives “gwen,” From the Proto-Brythonic *gwindos, and Proto-Celtic *windos (white, fair, blessed), plus “da,” from the Proto-Celtic *dagos (good). Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th-century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt.

Girl

Gennie

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Galvan

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gienia

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gauven

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gaëlle

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Girl

Gienka

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Delwyn

Godly friend

Boy

Jenůfa

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Geneva

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gwynne

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair). Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt.

Boy

Gavain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gavein

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gwenne

Gwenne is a short form of Gwendolen, Gwenllian, Gweneth, Gwenith, Gwenneth, and Gwenyth. It is of Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENDOLEN) (GWENLLIAN) and (GWYNEDD).

Girl

Jennel

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Geinwr

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gainor

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Żaneta

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gavann

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gavane

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gavine

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gavinn

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawane

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawein

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Wawayn

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawyne

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Guinal

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Gaenor

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gawain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Vienna

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic “*windos > windo-,” meaning “bright, white, fair.” Vienna (Austro-Bavarian: Wean) is the capital and largest city of Austria, and one of the nine states of Austria. Evidence has been found of continuous habitation since 500 BC when the Celts settled the site of Vienna on the Danube River. In 15 BC, the Romans fortified the frontier city they called Vindobona to guard the empire against Germanic tribes to the north.

Girl

Guénal

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Gwenol

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Jenika

This name is a combination (composed, blended name) of “Jennifer” and “Jessica.” It is of Proto-Celtic, Cornish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENHWŸFAR) and (ISKAH).

Girl

Guenda

This name derives From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos” (white, fair) plus “dolen” (ring, bow, hair, brow). The name means “fair bow, blessed ring, white ring, who has white eyelashes.” Saint Gwen Teirbron (French: Blanche; Latin: Alba trimammis or candida) was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn Ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the wild hunt.

Girl

Gaynor

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Winnie

Winnie is a diminutive of Edwina, Winifred, Winnifred, Gwendolyn, Guinevere, and Gwyneth. It is of Old English (Anglo-Saxon), Germanic, Proto-Celtic, Welsh and Cornish origin and comes from the roots: (EDWIN) (WINFRIÐ) (GWENDOLEN) (GWENHWŸFAR) and (GWYNEDD).

Unisex

Gaugein

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Welthan

This name is composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair), plus from the Old English “līnen” (Linum usitatissimum, “made of flax” or a “pale yellow-brown”). Gwenllian of Wales or Gwenllian Ferch Llywelyn (1282–1337) was the only son of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the last native Prince of Wales. She is sometimes confused with Gwenllian Ferch Gruffudd, who lived two centuries earlier.

Girl

Welthin

This name is composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair), plus from the Old English “līnen” (Linum usitatissimum, “made of flax” or a “pale yellow-brown”). Gwenllian of Wales or Gwenllian Ferch Llywelyn (1282–1337) was the only son of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the last native Prince of Wales. She is sometimes confused with Gwenllian Ferch Gruffudd, who lived two centuries earlier.

Girl

Genefra

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Guénaud

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Guennal

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Guénaël

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Jenifry

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Gaynour

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Jenefer

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Jennika

This name is a combination (composed, blended name) of “Jennifer” and “Jessica.” It is of Proto-Celtic, Cornish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENHWŸFAR) and (ISKAH).

Girl

Jennica

This name is a combination (composed, blended name) of “Jennifer” and “Jessica.” It is of Proto-Celtic, Cornish and Hebrew origin and comes from the following roots: (GWENHWŸFAR) and (ISKAH).

Girl

Jenilee

This name is a diminutive of Jane and Jennifer and a combination (composed, blended name) of “Jenny” and the popular “Suffix (-lee).” In turn, it is a variation of Jeanne and Guinevere. This name is of Hebrew, Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Cornish origin and comes from the following roots: (IŌÁNNĒS) and (GWENHWŸFAR).

Girl

Gwenole

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic, and Breton “*windos / *gwindos / gwyn > Gwenaël,” meaning “blessed and generous, white, fair.” Saint Gwen Teirbron was a Breton holy woman and wife of Saint Fragan who supposedly lived in the 6th century. Her epithet is Welsh for ‘(of the) three breasts.’ Gwyn ap Nudd is a Welsh mythological figure, the king of the Tylwyth Teg or “fair folk” and ruler of the Welsh Otherworld, Annwn. Described as a great warrior with a “blackened face,” Gwyn is intimately associated with the otherworld in medieval Welsh literature and is associated with the international tradition of the Wild Hunt. Saint Winwaloe was the founder and first abbot of Landévennec Abbey (literally “Lann of Venec”), also known as the monastery of Winwaloe. It was just south of Brest in Brittany, now part of France.

Boy

Galvant

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Galvain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Vauvain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Winifer

It seems a new compound name, probably from the Germanic element “*-winiz” (friend) plus the name “Jennifer.”

Girl

Gaugain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gauveis

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gauwain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gauvain

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Gawynus

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Wawanus

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Walwein

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Galvano

This name derives from the Proto-Celtic, Proto-Brythonic and Welsh articulated root: “*windos / *gwindos > gwalch gwyn > gawain.” It is the Late Medieval form of the name “Gawain,” which in turn is believed to have originated from the Welsh name “Walchgwn,” meaning “white hawk.” Kenneth Jackson suggested the name evolved from an early Common Brittonic name “*Ualcos Magesos,” meaning “Hawk of the plain.” Sir Gawain and the green knight is an epic poem connected with King Arthur’s roundtable. The form Gavin survived in Scotland and spread to other English-speaking countries in the 1960s. Gawain is King Arthur’s nephew and a knight of the round table in the Arthurian legend. Under the name Gwalchmei, he appears very early in the legend’s development, being mentioned in some of the earliest Welsh Arthurian sources.

Boy

Mairwen

This name is a combination (composed, blended name) of “Mair” and “Gwendolen, Gwenllian”. It is of Hebrew and Welsh origin and comes from the following roots: (MIRIAM) (GWENDOLEN) and (GWENLLIAN).

Girl

Genebra

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Żinewra

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Meinwen

This name is of Welsh origin, composed of two elements: “main” (slender) plus “*windos > *gwindos > gwen” (white, fair, blessed). The name means “slender and white, thin and fair.”

Girl

Ginewra

This name derives from the Cornish “Gwenhwÿfar,” composed of two elements: From the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning “white, fair” plus from the Proto-Celtic “seibrā (hwyfar),” meaning (phantom, spirit). The name means “the white fay, white phantom, white spirit.” In Arthurian legend, Gwenhwÿfar was the wife of King Arthur. It became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th-century. The name Jennifer has been in use since the 18th-century. Before 1906 the name was relatively uncommon, but it gained some recognition after George Bernard Shaw used it for the main female character in The Doctor’s Dilemma.

Girl

Bronwyn

It is a Welsh feminine given name. It is closely associated with the similar name Branwen, which appears in medieval Welsh literature. The name is composed of two Proto-Brythonic elements: from the Welsh “bron,” From Proto-Brythonic *bronnā (breast, womb), and the Proto-Brythonic “*gwindos,” and Proto-Celtic “*windos,” meaning (white, fair, blessed).

Girl

Popular Themes in Proto-celtic Names

Related Origins

History of Proto-celtic Names

Proto-celtic names developed within the Proto-celtic language tradition. The naming traditions from regions where Proto-celtic is spoken have evolved over centuries, shaped by migration, trade, religion, and cultural exchange. Today's Proto-celtic names carry this history.

Proto-celtic naming traditions reflect the values and beliefs of regions where Proto-celtic is spoken. Names served multiple purposes: identifying individuals, honoring ancestors, expressing hopes for a child's future, and marking religious or cultural affiliation. These functions shaped which names became popular and how they were used.

Today, Proto-celtic names appear far beyond regions where Proto-celtic is spoken. Immigration, global media, and cultural exchange have made many Proto-celtic names familiar worldwide. Parents choose these names to honor heritage, appreciate their meanings, or simply because they like how they sound. The 194 names in this collection range from ancient choices still popular today to names that have fallen out of use but retain historical interest.

Proto-celtic Naming Traditions

Proto-celtic naming traditions have developed their own patterns and preferences. Names may honor family members, reflect religious beliefs, describe hoped-for qualities, or commemorate significant events. These patterns explain which names stayed popular.

These traditional patterns still matter, but modern parents also mix things up. Some combine traditional and contemporary elements, pick names from other cultures, or create unique variations of classic names.

Gender Distribution

194
Total Names
73
Boy Names (38%)
119
Girl Names (61%)

This collection breaks down to 38% masculine names (73) and 61% feminine names (119).

How to Pronounce Proto-celtic Names

Proto-celtic names follow the phonetic rules of their language of origin. English speakers may need to adjust their pronunciation for sounds that don't exist in English. Each name page includes a pronunciation guide to help.

When in doubt about pronunciation, listening to native speakers helps more than reading transliterations. Each name page has a pronunciation guide. If you're considering a Proto-celtic name for your child, say it out loud and think about how others in your community will pronounce it.

Proto-celtic Names Today

Our collection includes 194 Proto-celtic names. While some are common choices, others are rare finds that could give a child a distinctive name with authentic cultural roots.

Proto-celtic names for girls outnumber those for boys in our collection. Many cultures have developed distinct naming traditions for each gender.

Current naming trends show renewed interest in heritage names, with parents seeking meaningful connections to cultural roots. Some Proto-celtic names have crossed over to mainstream use, while others remain specific to Proto-celtic-speaking communities.

Frequently Asked Questions About Proto-celtic Names

What are popular Proto-celtic names for boys?

Popular Proto-celtic names for boys include Gwendolyn, Gwendoline, Jyn, Neva, Gaël. Our database contains 73 Proto-celtic names traditionally given to boys, ranging from classic choices to unique options.

What are popular Proto-celtic names for girls?

Our collection includes 119 Proto-celtic names for girls. Popular choices blend traditional sounds with meaningful origins. Use the feminine tab to explore options organized by popularity.

What do Proto-celtic names typically mean?

Proto-celtic names carry meanings from the Proto-celtic language tradition. Common themes in Proto-celtic names include noble, beautiful, warrior, leader. Each name in our database includes its specific meaning and cultural context.

How do you pronounce Proto-celtic names?

Proto-celtic names follow the phonetic rules of their language. Each name page includes a pronunciation guide. When uncertain, listening to native speakers provides the most accurate reference.

How many Proto-celtic names are there?

This database contains 194 Proto-celtic names: 73 for boys and 119 for girls. This represents documented names that have been used historically or are in current use. The actual number of Proto-celtic names ever used is certainly higher.

Are Proto-celtic names hard to spell?

Spelling difficulty depends on the specific name and your familiarity with Proto-celtic phonetics. Some Proto-celtic names have been adapted to English spelling conventions, making them straightforward. Others retain original spellings that may be unfamiliar. Consider how important easy spelling is to you when choosing a name.