Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Gudrid

Meaning — An Old Norse feminine name composed of "guð" meaning "god" or "battle" and "ríðr" meaning "rider" or possibly "fríðr" meaning "beautiful" — thus "divine rider" or "god-beautiful". Gudríðr Þorbjarnardóttir is one of the most remarkable figures of the Norse sagas: she sailed to Vinland (North America), gave birth to the first European child born in the Americas (Snorri Þorfinnsson), then after her husband's death she walked to Rome and back, and ended her days as an anchorite.·Old Norse origin·Female·GOO-drid

Gudrid Gudrid is the name of the most extraordinary female traveller of the Norse world — a woman whose life encompassed the farthest reaches of the medieval world from Vinland to Rome without ever seeming remarkable to her contemporaries. Characters named Gudrid tend to be quietly unstoppable, driven by an interior purpose that does not need external validation or the approval of onlookers. The name suits explorer heroines, spiritual questers, and women whose journey is the story.

Best genres for Gudrid

Historical FictionAdventureFantasyMythology

Famous characters named Gudrid

Gudríðr Þorbjarnardóttir

Eiríks saga rauða / Grœnlendinga saga Anonymous (Old Norse)

The most widely travelled woman of the Viking Age — she sailed to Vinland, raised a son in the Americas, walked to Rome on pilgrimage, and became an anchorite, making her life story one of the most extraordinary recorded in the medieval period.


Variations & nicknames

GudridGudríðrGuðríðr

Pairs well with

Gudrid ÞorbjarnardóttirGudrid EriksdóttirGudrid HaugenGudrid BergGudrid VikGudrid Strand

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Related names


More Old Norse names

Thyra

A feminine name of Old Norse origin, possibly derived from "þórr" (Thor) combined with a suffix, or from a Proto-Germanic root related to "þurs" meaning "giant" or from "þrá" meaning "to yearn" or "to persist". Thyra (also spelled Thyri or Þyra) was a famous Danish queen of the 10th century, wife of Gorm the Old and mother of Harald Bluetooth, and is celebrated in Danish national tradition for her construction of the Ravning Bridge.

Sven-ake

Sven-åke is a Swedish compound masculine name joining Sven — from Old Norse "sveinn" meaning "young man, servant, attendant" — with Åke, from Old Norse "Áki", a diminutive related to the Proto-Norse "Anawakaz" meaning "ancestor, father". Together the name can be understood as something like "young man of the ancestors". Such hyphenated double names are common in Swedish naming tradition.

Freydis

An Old Norse feminine name composed of "Freyr" (the fertility god) or "freyja" (lady) and "dís" meaning "divine woman" or female protective spirit — thus "divine lady" or "Freyr's dís". The most famous bearer is Freydís Eiríksdóttir, daughter of Erik the Red and sister of Leif Eriksson, who appears in the Vinland sagas as one of the most startlingly violent and morally ambiguous women in the Norse literary record.

Holger

A Scandinavian masculine name derived from Old Norse "Holmgeirr", composed of "holmr" meaning "island" and "geirr" meaning "spear". The name is associated with Holger Danske (Ogier the Dane), a legendary hero of Carolingian epic tradition who, according to Danish legend, sleeps beneath Kronborg Castle and will awaken to defend Denmark in its hour of greatest need.

Vigdis

An Old Norse feminine name composed of "víg" meaning "battle" or "war" and "dís" meaning "divine woman", "female spirit", or a category of female supernatural beings in Norse religion — thus "battle-dís" or "divine woman of war". The dísir were protective female spirits associated with fate, fertility, and the dead; a woman named Vigdís was therefore a woman with the divine-warrior protective spirit of the dísir.

Ingegerd

An Old Norse feminine name composed of the theophoric element "Ing" (the Norse fertility deity, associated with Freyr) and "garðr" meaning "enclosure", "stronghold", or "yard". The name thus means something like "Ing's stronghold" or "protected by Ing". It was borne most famously by Ingegerd Olofsdotter of Sweden (c. 1001–1050), princess of Sweden who became Grand Princess of Kiev and was later venerated as a saint in the Russian Orthodox Church.


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