Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Aiden

Meaning — An anglicised spelling of Aodhán, the diminutive of the Old Irish Aodh, meaning "fire" — Aodh was the Celtic god of sun and fire. The name was borne by several early Irish saints, most notably Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne (c. 590–651), who helped Christianise northern England. Aiden is the most common American English spelling; Aidan is the Irish and British form.·Irish origin·Male·AY-den

Aiden Aiden is a name of fiery vitality and Celtic warmth — it suggests someone energetic, passionate, and quick to act, with a spirit that resists being smothered. Characters named Aiden tend to be compelling young protagonists, driven by instinct and emotion more than calculation. The name is popular in YA and fantasy, where its fire etymology fits characters who literally or figuratively burn with purpose.

Best genres for Aiden

FantasyYoung AdultContemporary FictionHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Aiden

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

AidenAidanAydenAdenAodhán

Pairs well with

Aiden QuinnAiden GallagherAiden DonovanAiden BurkeAiden FlynnAiden Callahan

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Related names


More Irish names

Siobhan

The Irish form of Joan or Jane, introduced into Ireland via the Norman French name Jehanne during the medieval period. The name ultimately derives from the Hebrew Yohanan, meaning "God is gracious". Siobhán has been a staple of Irish feminine naming for centuries and became internationally recognisable through Irish actresses and cultural figures.

Reagan

An anglicised form of the Irish surname "Ó Riagáin" or "Ó Reagáin", derived from the Old Irish "riagán" possibly meaning "little king" or from "rí" (king) combined with a diminutive suffix. The name transitioned from a patronymic surname to a given name through the Irish-American tradition of using family surnames as first names, a practice that preserved ancestral Celtic identity through generations of the diaspora.

Clodagh

Named after the River Clodagh in County Tipperary and County Waterford, Ireland — one of several Irish rivers whose names became given names. The river name itself is of uncertain Celtic origin, possibly derived from an ancient tribal or geographical term. Clodagh as a given name was popularised by the Marquess of Waterford who named his daughter after the family's local river in the late nineteenth century, making it a relatively modern addition to the Irish naming canon.

Saoirse

Derived directly from the Irish word "saoirse" meaning "freedom" or "liberty", itself from "saor" meaning "free". The name rose to prominence in Ireland during the 1920s, in the aftermath of the Irish War of Independence and the establishment of the Irish Free State, when the concept of freedom carried profound political and cultural weight.

Seán

The Irish form of John, introduced from the Norman French "Jean" (itself from Latin Iohannes and Hebrew Yohanan meaning "God is gracious") following the Norman invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century. Seán quickly displaced the older native form "Eoin" as the most common Irish masculine name and has remained so, producing some of the most celebrated names in Irish cultural history — from Seán O'Casey to Seán Lemass.

Máire

The Irish form of Mary, from the Latin "Maria" and Hebrew "Miryam", of debated meaning — possibly "sea of bitterness", "rebelliousness", or "their beloved". Máire is distinct from the English Mary in its Irish Gaelic form and was deliberately avoided as a given name in early Christian Ireland out of reverence for the Virgin Mary, which paradoxically led to it becoming one of the most common Irish women's names once that tradition relaxed in the post-medieval period.


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