Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Gwion

Meaning — Possibly from the Welsh "gwyn" (white, blessed, fair) or a more ancient root related to the Proto-Celtic "widu" (wood, forest). Gwion Bach (Little Gwion) is the original name of Taliesin before his transformation: the boy who accidentally swallows three drops of Ceridwen's cauldron of inspiration, gaining all knowledge, and is subsequently pursued, transformed through multiple animal shapes, swallowed by Ceridwen as a grain of wheat, and reborn as the greatest of all Welsh poets.·Welsh origin·Male·GWEE-on

Gwion Gwion represents the accidental hero — the character who stumbles into transformation they did not seek and are not prepared for, and must spend the rest of the story becoming equal to what happened to them. The shape-shifting pursuit sequence gives the name a quality of radical adaptability, someone who survives by becoming what the moment requires. Characters named Gwion often have hidden depths that reveal themselves only under pressure.

Best genres for Gwion

FantasyMythologyHistorical FictionYoung Adult FantasyLiterary Fantasy

Famous characters named Gwion

Gwion Bach

Hanes Taliesin (The Tale of Taliesin) Anonymous (Welsh Mythology)

The original identity of Taliesin before his magical transformation — a serving boy who stumbles into cosmic knowledge and must flee through a sequence of animal metamorphoses before his rebirth as the archetypal Welsh bard.


Variations & nicknames

GwionGwion BachTaliesin

Pairs well with

Gwion ap RhysGwion LloydGwion WilliamsGwion GriffithsGwion BachGwion Powys

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Related names

Taliesin

Welsh · “Derived from the Welsh elements "tal" meaning "brow" or "head" and "iesin" meaning "shining" or "radiant" — together meaning "shining brow". This was the name of the great semi-legendary 6th-century Welsh bard who is credited with the earliest surviving Welsh poetry. Taliesin appears in Welsh legend as a shape-shifting prophet born of the enchantress Ceridwen's cauldron after consuming drops of her potion of wisdom.

Emrys

Welsh · “Welsh form of the Late Latin "Ambrosius", from the Greek "ambrosios" meaning "immortal" or "divine", from "ambrotos" (immortal). Emrys is most famous as the Welsh name of the legendary wizard Merlin, who appears as "Myrddin Emrys" in Welsh tradition — the prophetic magician who serves as counsellor to Uther Pendragon and Arthur. The name carries associations with prophecy, hidden knowledge, and sacred power.

Pryderi

Welsh · “Derived from the Welsh word "pryder" meaning "care", "worry", or "anxiety" — his mother Rhiannon named him thus because she had been sorrowed and worried (pryder) through his mysterious disappearance at birth. Pryderi is a central figure of the Mabinogi, appearing in all four branches, making him one of the most significant characters in Welsh mythological tradition.

Lleu

Welsh · “Derived from the Proto-Celtic "Lugus" meaning "light" or "bright", cognate with the Irish Lugh. In Welsh mythology, Lleu Llaw Gyffes ("Lleu of the Skilful Hand") is the hero of the Fourth Branch of the Mabinogi, a figure surrounded by destiny and magic — unable to receive a name, arms, or a wife from human women except through enchantment. His story explores identity, fate, and the cost of supernatural gifts.

Celyn

Welsh · “Derived from the Welsh word "celyn" meaning "holly". The holly tree has deep significance in Celtic tradition as an evergreen plant that flourishes in winter, representing protection, endurance, and the persistence of life through the dark season. The name appears in early Welsh genealogical tradition and belongs to the nature-name category common in Welsh personal naming.


More Welsh names

Taliesin

Derived from the Welsh elements "tal" meaning "brow" or "head" and "iesin" meaning "shining" or "radiant" — together meaning "shining brow". This was the name of the great semi-legendary 6th-century Welsh bard who is credited with the earliest surviving Welsh poetry. Taliesin appears in Welsh legend as a shape-shifting prophet born of the enchantress Ceridwen's cauldron after consuming drops of her potion of wisdom.

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.

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.

Ceredwyn

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.

Owain

Welsh form of the name ultimately derived from the Latin "Eugenius" (well-born) or possibly the Celtic "Esugenos" (born of the god Esus). Owain ap Urien is one of the great heroes of early Welsh tradition, a warrior of the Men of the North who became integrated into Arthurian legend as Yvain in French romance. Owain Glyndŵr (c.1359–c.1416) is the greatest Welsh national hero, the last native Prince of Wales, who led the Welsh revolt against English rule.

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.


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