Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Ceredwyn

Meaning — An alternative spelling of Ceridwen, from Welsh elements possibly combining "cerdd" (poetry, craft) and "gwyn/gwen" (white, blessed) — meaning "blessed poetry" or "fair enchantress". This variant spelling appears in some Welsh sources and modern usage, representing the same mythological figure: the great enchantress of Welsh tradition who possesses the cauldron of Awen.·Welsh origin·Female·keh-RED-win

Ceredwyn Ceredwyn shares all the qualities of Ceridwen — the wise woman of dangerous knowledge, the guardian of transformative power — but the variant spelling gives it a slightly more modern, accessible quality while retaining the mythological weight. Characters with this name are typically women of formidable intellectual and creative gifts who operate according to their own deep internal code, using their powers to shape the destinies of those around them.

Best genres for Ceredwyn

FantasyMythologyHistorical FictionMagical RealismLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Ceredwyn

Ceridwen/Ceredwyn

The Tale of Taliesin Traditional Welsh Mythology

The powerful enchantress whose cauldron of inspiration accidentally transforms Gwion Bach into the greatest of all Welsh bards, Taliesin.


Variations & nicknames

CeredwynCeridwenCerridwen

Pairs well with

Ceredwyn ferch OgyrvenCeredwyn MorganCeredwyn LloydCeredwyn GriffithsCeredwyn TudorCeredwyn Watkins

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Related names

Rhiannon

Welsh · “Possibly derived from the Old Celtic title "Rigantona" meaning "great queen" or "divine queen", from "rigan" (queen) and a divine suffix. In Welsh mythology, Rhiannon is one of the most important figures of the Mabinogi — a sovereign goddess associated with horses, birds, and the Otherworld who endures unjust punishment with superhuman patience before being vindicated.

Branwen

Welsh · “Derived from the Old Welsh elements "bran" meaning "raven" and "gwen" meaning "white" or "blessed" — together meaning "white raven" or "blessed raven". In the Second Branch of the Mabinogi, Branwen is the daughter of Llŷr, described as one of the three chief ladies of the island of Britain, whose forced marriage to the Irish king Matholwch and subsequent mistreatment trigger a catastrophic war between Britain and Ireland.

Arianrhod

Welsh · “Derived from the Welsh elements "arian" meaning "silver" and "rhod" meaning "wheel" or "disc" — together meaning "silver wheel" or "silver disc", likely a reference to the moon or a spinning wheel. Arianrhod is a powerful figure in Welsh mythology, the daughter of Dôn and mother of Lleu Llaw Gyffes, who cursed her son three times in the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi.

Blodeuwedd

Welsh · “Derived from the Welsh elements "blodeu" meaning "flowers" and "gwedd" meaning "face" or "form" — together meaning "flower face" or "made of flowers". In the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi, Blodeuwedd is literally created by the magicians Math and Gwydion from the blossoms of oak, broom, and meadowsweet to serve as a wife for Lleu Llaw Gyffes, since he was under a curse preventing him from taking a human wife.

Nimue

Celtic · “The origin of Nimue is disputed; it may derive from Brythonic Celtic, possibly related to a word for "lake" or connected to the British water goddess Nemetona. Nimue is the Lady of the Lake in Arthurian legend — the enchantress who gives King Arthur his sword Excalibur, entraps the wizard Merlin in a cave or crystal tower, and raises Lancelot in her underwater realm. She is one of the most powerful female figures in the Matter of Britain.


More Welsh names

Bedwyr

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.

Cynfael

Welsh compound name from "cyn" (first, chief, before) and "mael" (prince, leader), meaning "first prince" or "chief prince". The name appears in early Welsh genealogical records and belongs to the tradition of aristocratic Welsh compound names that project authority and precedence. It has the elevated register of a name given to heirs and eldest sons in the medieval Welsh noble tradition.

Arvel

Arvel is a Welsh masculine name derived from the Welsh arvel or arfol, related to words meaning "wept over" or "greatly lamented," with associations to mourning and memory in Welsh tradition. It is a rare name found primarily in Wales and among Welsh diaspora communities.

Bran

Derived from the Old Welsh and Old Irish word "bran" meaning "raven". In Welsh mythology, Bran the Blessed (Bendigeidfran) is a giant king of Britain who possesses a magical cauldron capable of restoring the dead to life. In Irish mythology, Bran mac Febail is the hero of an early voyage tale, sailing to the otherworldly islands of the west. The raven was a bird of prophecy and the battlefield in Celtic tradition.

Annwn

From the Welsh "annwfn" or "annwn" meaning "the very deep" or "the un-world" — the Welsh Otherworld, a paradise beneath or within the earth where time moves differently and the dead feast with the gods. Arawn is its king and Pwyll of Dyfed visits it in the First Branch of the Mabinogi. As a personal name (extremely rare), it carries the entire weight of the Welsh Otherworld tradition — mystery, depth, and the liminal space between living and dead.

Branwen

Derived from the Old Welsh elements "bran" meaning "raven" and "gwen" meaning "white" or "blessed" — together meaning "white raven" or "blessed raven". In the Second Branch of the Mabinogi, Branwen is the daughter of Llŷr, described as one of the three chief ladies of the island of Britain, whose forced marriage to the Irish king Matholwch and subsequent mistreatment trigger a catastrophic war between Britain and Ireland.


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