Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Cador

Meaning — Derived from the Cornish/Brythonic "cad" meaning "battle" or "warrior". Cador is a figure in Arthurian legend and early Welsh tradition, associated with Cornwall — Geoffrey of Monmouth names him Duke of Cornwall and guardian of Guinevere. The name projects martial dedication with a specific Cornish regional identity, placing it in the Arthurian world at the point where Britain meets the Atlantic.·Cornish / Brythonic origin·Male·KAY-dor

Cador Cador has the directness of the warrior name — a character who knows their role and fulfils it with complete dedication, without the philosophical complications of heroes like Gawain or the tragic contradictions of figures like Mordred. The Cornish connection grounds it in a specific landscape and culture, giving characters a fierce regional pride alongside their martial competence.

Best genres for Cador

Historical FictionFantasyArthurian FictionAdventureMythology

Famous characters named Cador

Cador of Cornwall

Historia Regum Britanniae Geoffrey of Monmouth

Duke of Cornwall in the Arthurian tradition, father of Constantine who succeeds Arthur, and one of the great lords of the British realm in the history Geoffrey constructs.


Variations & nicknames

CadorCaterCadwr

Pairs well with

Cador TreloarCador PenhallurickCador TrevenaCador BosankoCador NancarrowCador Polglase

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Related names

Jago

Cornish · “Cornish form of James or Jacob, derived through the Cornish language from the same Latin-Greek-Hebrew source as James: "Jacomus" from "Iacobus" from the Hebrew "Ya'aqov" meaning "supplanter" or "one who follows at the heel". Jago is a distinctively Cornish name that gives this ancient biblical name a fresh Celtic identity rooted in the Cornish language tradition.

Bedwyr

Welsh · “Derived from Welsh elements, possibly from "bedw" meaning "birch" and "gwyrr" meaning "man" — together meaning "birch man". Bedwyr was one of the original companions of King Arthur in early Welsh tradition — the one-handed warrior who was Arthur's most loyal champion long before the French romances invented Lancelot. In the Welsh tale Culhwch and Olwen, Bedwyr is described as the swiftest and most faithful of Arthur's men.

Arthek

Cornish · “A Cornish form derived from the same root as Arthur — from the Celtic "artos" meaning "bear" or possibly from the Latin "Artorius". Arthek is the specifically Cornish variant that retains the native Cornish phonetic quality. The bear symbolism connects the name to strength, protection, and sovereignty in Celtic tradition.

Piran

Cornish · “Derived from the Cornish form of the Latin "Piranus", itself possibly from the Greek "pyrrhos" meaning "flame-coloured" or "fire-red". Saint Piran is the patron saint of Cornwall, a legendary Irish missionary who, according to tradition, crossed the sea from Ireland to Cornwall on a millstone. He is associated with the discovery of tin smelting and appears on the Cornish flag — a white cross on black, representing his discovery that tin ran silver-white from the black ore in his fire.

Tristan

French · “Tristan is a French masculine given name of Celtic origin, possibly from the Pictish/Brythonic name Drust or Drustanus, meaning "tumult, noise" — or connected to the Latin tristis meaning "sad". The medieval legend of Tristan and Iseult, one of the great love stories of Western literature, made the name synonymous with passionate, doomed love. The name spread across France, Brittany, and the Celtic regions through Arthurian romance tradition.


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