Character Name
Doireann
Doireann Doireann carries the sacred atmosphere of the ancient oak grove — a name for characters associated with nature's spiritual power and the old religions. The druidic oak-grove connection suggests a character with deep roots in the Irish landscape, wisdom that pre-dates Christianity, and a relationship with the natural world that others might call enchanted. Characters named Doireann tend to be quietly powerful, their connection to the old ways a source of both wisdom and danger.
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Doireann
The Fenian Cycle — Traditional Irish Mythology
A figure from the Fianna tales associated with enchantment and the fairy world, whose story involves the bewitchment of Fionn mac Cumhaill.
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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.”
Aoife
Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "Aífe", itself from the word "oíph" meaning "beauty" (modern Irish "aoibh"). This ancient Irish name has been borne by several legendary figures, most notably a fierce warrior woman who engaged in single combat with the hero Cúchulainn, and a jealous queen in the tale of the Children of Lir who transformed her stepchildren into swans.”
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.”
Brigid
Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "Brigit" or "Bríg", meaning "exalted one" or "the high one", from a Proto-Celtic root "briganti" meaning "high, lofty, the exalted one". Brigid was one of the most important goddesses of pre-Christian Ireland, associated with poetry, healing, smithcraft, and the hearth fire. The Christianised Saint Brigid of Kildare (c. 451–525) became one of Ireland's three patron saints.”
Cliona
Old Irish · “Possibly derived from Old Irish "clú" meaning "fame" or "renown" with a feminine suffix. Clíodhna (also spelled Clíona or Cliodhna) is a significant figure in Irish mythology — one of the three waves of Ireland and a queen of the sídhe (fairy mounds) of Munster. She was sometimes said to be the most beautiful woman in the world, ruling the otherworldly realm of Tír Tairngire.”
More Old Irish names
Fionn
“Derived from the Old Irish "find" meaning "white", "fair", or "fair-haired". It is one of the most celebrated names in Irish mythology as the given name of Fionn mac Cumhaill, the legendary leader of the Fianna warrior band. Fionn gained supernatural wisdom as a boy by accidentally tasting the Salmon of Knowledge, and he became Ireland's greatest hero and protector.”
Cliona
“Possibly derived from Old Irish "clú" meaning "fame" or "renown" with a feminine suffix. Clíodhna (also spelled Clíona or Cliodhna) is a significant figure in Irish mythology — one of the three waves of Ireland and a queen of the sídhe (fairy mounds) of Munster. She was sometimes said to be the most beautiful woman in the world, ruling the otherworldly realm of Tír Tairngire.”
Sorcha
“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.”
Aisling
“From the Old Irish "aisling" or "aislinge" meaning "dream" or "vision". In Irish literary tradition, an aisling is a specific genre of poem in which a poet encounters a beautiful woman in a dream — the personification of Ireland — who laments the country's suffering under foreign rule and prophecies its liberation. The name thus carries the weight of an entire literary and political tradition within Irish culture.”
Conchobar
“From the Old Irish "Conchobar" (anglicised as Conor, Connor, or Cornelius), possibly meaning "lover of hounds" (from "con", hound/dog) or "high will" (from "con-", intensive prefix, and "cobor", desiring). In Irish mythology, Conchobar mac Nessa was the legendary King of Ulster and patron of the Red Branch Knights, presiding over the great warriors of the Ulster Cycle including Cúchulainn — one of the most complex and morally ambiguous kings in the Irish tradition.”
Oisín
“Derived from the Old Irish "os" meaning "deer" combined with the diminutive suffix "-ín", giving the meaning "little deer" or "young fawn". In Irish mythology, Oisín was the greatest poet and warrior of the Fianna, son of the legendary hero Fionn mac Cumhaill. His mother Sadhbh had been transformed into a deer, and so the name carries a poetic link to his origins.”
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