Character Name
Aisling
Aisling Aisling suits characters who exist slightly outside ordinary reality — dreamers, visionaries, and idealists who perceive possibilities others cannot see. The aisling poetic tradition gives the name a political and romantic dimension, connecting its bearers to a long Irish tradition of imagining a better world. Characters named Aisling are often artists, teachers, or community organisers whose dreams quietly reshape the world around them.
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Related names
Niamh
Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish word "niamh" meaning "bright" or "radiant". The name belongs to one of the most celebrated figures of Irish mythology, Niamh of the Golden Hair, a princess of Tír na nÓg (the Land of Eternal Youth) who fell in love with the poet-warrior Oisín and carried him away on her white horse across the sea.”
Caoimhe
Irish · “Derived from the Irish word "caomh" meaning "gentle", "beautiful", or "precious". The name has been used in Ireland since the early medieval period and is associated with warmth, kindness, and quiet inner beauty. Several Irish saints bore forms of this name, reflecting its long tradition within Irish Christian culture.”
Saoirse
Irish · “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.”
Sorcha
Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish word "sorcha" meaning "brightness", "radiance", or "light". It shares the same root as the modern Irish adjective "sorch" meaning "clear" or "bright". Sorcha has been used as an Irish equivalent of Sarah or Clara in anglicised contexts, though it is entirely distinct in origin. The name has been popular in Ireland and Scotland for centuries.”
Clodagh
Irish · “Derived from the River Clóirtheach (anglicised as Clody) in County Wexford and County Carlow, Ireland. River names in Irish tradition often carry associations with flowing abundance, boundary-crossing, and the sacred nature of water. The name was popularised by the Marquess of Waterford, who named his daughter Clodagh in 1879, after which it entered the wider Irish naming tradition.”
More Old Irish names
Aoibhinn
“Derived from the Old Irish "aoibhinn" meaning "delightful", "pleasant", or "beautiful" — an intensified form of "aoibh" (radiance, beauty). The word is used in Irish to describe something deeply enjoyable or beautiful, and as a name it expresses pure delight in the bearer. The name is closely related to Aoife and Caoimhe in its root concepts of beauty and pleasantness.”
Cian
“From the Old Irish "cian" meaning "ancient", "enduring", or "of long standing". In Irish mythology, Cian was a figure of the Tuatha Dé Danann, father of the sun god Lugh by the Fomorian princess Ethniu. The name has been borne by several early Irish saints and kings, lending it a lineage stretching back to the earliest strata of Irish recorded history.”
Lochlainn
“Derived from the Old Irish "Lochlainn" meaning "land of the lochs" or "land of the lakes" — the Irish term for Scandinavia (later specifically Norway), the homeland of the Vikings who raided and settled Ireland from the 8th century. As a given name, it was adopted from the place name and came to carry associations with the Norse world and the Viking-Irish cultural fusion of medieval Ireland.”
Rónán
“From the Old Irish "rón" meaning "seal" combined with the diminutive suffix "-án", giving the meaning "little seal" or "seal-like one". In Irish mythology and folklore, seals were often considered to be transformed humans — the selkie tradition — and Rónán figures in several tragic Irish tales, most notably the tale of Rónán mac Aed, a king whose jealous son falsely accuses his stepmother, leading to a catastrophe reminiscent of the Greek myth of Phaedra and Hippolytus.”
Diarmuid
“Derived from the Old Irish "Diarmait", possibly from "di" (without) and "airmit" (envy) — meaning "without envy" or "free from jealousy". Alternatively interpreted as "freeman". In Irish mythology, Diarmuid Ua Duibhne was the most handsome warrior of the Fianna, whose magical "love spot" on his forehead caused any woman who glimpsed it to fall instantly in love with him, leading to the legendary elopement with Gráinne.”
Maeve
“Anglicised form of the Irish "Méabh" or "Medb", possibly derived from an Old Irish word meaning "intoxicating" or "she who intoxicates" — connected to "mead" in its associations with sovereignty rituals. Queen Medb of Connacht is one of the most powerful figures in Irish mythology, the warrior queen whose desire for equal status with her husband triggers the great war of the Táin Bó Cúailnge.”
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