Character Name
Ingegerd
Ingegerd Ingegerd is a name of deep Viking-Age prestige — it belonged to queens and saints who moved between Scandinavian, Slavic, and Byzantine worlds. Characters with this name suggest royal bearing, cross-cultural adaptability, and a quiet spiritual power. The name is ideal for sagas, Norse-inspired fantasy, or historical novels set in the early medieval period.
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Famous characters named Ingegerd
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Related names
Sigrid
Old Norse · “An Old Norse feminine name composed of "sigr" meaning "victory" and "fríðr" meaning "beautiful" or "beloved" — thus "victory-beautiful" or "beloved through victory". Sigrid Storråda ("the haughty") was a famous 10th-century Swedish queen who refused to convert to Christianity and burned two suitor-kings alive in a hall — one of the most dramatic figures in Norse historical tradition, though her historicity is debated.”
Ragnhild
Old Norse · “An Old Norse feminine name composed of "regin" meaning "counsel", "power", or "divine powers" (the gods, or fate itself) and "hildr" meaning "battle" — thus "counsel in battle" or "battle-power of the gods". The name was borne by several Norwegian queens and appears throughout the Norse sagas, representing a high-status feminine ideal combining divine favour with martial will.”
Ingrid
French · “Ingrid is a Scandinavian feminine name, from the Old Norse Ingríðr — composed of Ing (a Norse fertility god, ancestor of the Ingvaeones) and fríðr meaning "beautiful, beloved". The name entered French use through Scandinavian royal connections and the global fame of Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman, who starred in French films and became one of cinema's most beloved figures. It is used as a given name in France with a distinctly cosmopolitan, northern European flavor.”
More Old Norse names
Tone
“Tone is a Scandinavian feminine name, used primarily in Norway and Sweden as a diminutive form of Antona or Antonie, which derives from the Roman family name Antonius of uncertain origin, though some sources link it to the Greek "anthos" (flower). In Norwegian usage, Tone is a fully independent given name and has been popular since the early 20th century.”
Solveig
“An Old Norse feminine name composed of "sol" meaning "sun" and "veig" meaning "strength", "power", or "a strong drink" — thus "sun-strength" or "power of the sun". The name gained international fame through Henrik Ibsen's drama "Peer Gynt" (1867), in which Solveig is the faithful, luminous heroine who waits decades for the return of the errant hero.”
Ivar
“Derived from Old Norse "Ívarr", composed of "yr" meaning "yew" (the wood of bows) and "arr" meaning "warrior" or "army" — thus "yew warrior" or "bow warrior". Ivar the Boneless (died c.873) was one of the most feared Norse leaders who commanded the Great Heathen Army that invaded England in 865, and the name appears throughout the Norse sagas as the name of warriors and kings of the highest rank.”
Gudrid
“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.”
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.”
Thorvald
“An Old Norse masculine name composed of "þórr" (Thor, the thunder god) and "valdr" meaning "ruler" or "power" — thus "ruler under Thor's power" or "Thor's ruler". Thorvald Eriksson was the brother of Leif Eriksson who led one of the earliest Norse expeditions to Vinland (North America) and was killed there by indigenous people, becoming one of the first Europeans recorded to die in the Americas.”
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