Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Christelle

Meaning — Christelle is a French feminine given name, a diminutive form of Christine, itself derived from the Latin Christianus meaning "a Christian" or "follower of Christ", from the Greek Christos meaning "anointed one". The -elle suffix is a characteristically French diminutive, giving the name a lighter, more modern feel than Christine. It became popular in France during the second half of the 20th century.·French origin·Female·krees-TEL

Christelle Christelle has the approachable freshness of a mid-20th-century French feminine name — modern enough to feel current but rooted in Christian tradition. Characters with this name often inhabit contemporary French provincial settings or Paris, projecting warmth and practicality with a distinctly Gallic emotional directness suited to realist fiction and character-driven drama.

Best genres for Christelle

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionRomanceCrime Fiction

Famous characters named Christelle

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


Variations & nicknames

ChristelleChristineChristelKristelle

Pairs well with

Christelle MartinChristelle BernardChristelle PetitChristelle LeroyChristelle RousseauChristelle Morin

Writing a character named Christelle?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

Related names


More French names

Josette

Josette is a French feminine given name, a diminutive of Josèphe or Joséphine — the feminine forms of Joseph, from the Hebrew Yosef meaning "God will add". The -ette suffix is the characteristically French diminutive that creates affectionate, intimate names. Josette was particularly popular in France during the early-to-mid 20th century, associated with a warm, provincial French femininity that feels thoroughly Gallic.

Frederic

Frédéric is a French masculine given name, the French form of Frederick, from the Old High German Frithuric composed of frithu meaning "peace" and ric meaning "ruler, power" — thus "peaceful ruler". The name was carried by Holy Roman Emperors and Prussian kings and entered French through Germanic-French court culture. In France, Frédéric Chopin and Frédéric Mistral gave the name literary and artistic prestige.

Lucy

Lucy is an Anglicized form of Lucia, from the Latin Lux meaning "light". Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia, died c. 304), the Syracusan martyr whose eyes were gouged out yet remained miraculously sighted, is one of the most venerated saints in Italy and Scandinavia. In Italian-French contexts, Lucy represents the international form of Lucia, used in communities with English-speaking connections alongside the native Lucia or Lucie.

Luc

Luc is the French masculine form of Luke, from the Latin Lucas — derived from the Greek Loukas, possibly meaning "man from Lucania" (a region of southern Italy) or related to the Greek leukos meaning "bright, white, light". Saint Luke the Evangelist, companion of Paul and author of the third Gospel and Acts of the Apostles, gave the name enduring Christian prestige. In France, Luc has been a classic, clean-cut masculine name.

Suzanne

Suzanne is the French form of Susanna, from the Hebrew Shoshana meaning "lily" or "rose". The biblical Susanna — the virtuous woman falsely accused by two elders in the Book of Daniel — gave the name its moral resonance. In France, Suzanne became famous through Beaumarchais's The Marriage of Figaro, whose resourceful heroine Suzanne is the opera's most intelligent character, outsmarting the Count with wit and dignity.

Marion

Marion is a French unisex given name, a medieval French diminutive of Marie (Mary), derived from the Hebrew Miriam of uncertain meaning — possibly "wished-for child," "beloved," or "rebellious." As a masculine name it is found in French-speaking countries and in the American South; as a feminine name it is used across English, French, and other European cultures.


Explore more