Character Name
Ita
Ita Íta carries the authority of the holy woman who nurtures greatness in others — a name for characters defined by their role as teachers, mentors, and spiritual guides. Saint Íte's title as foster-mother of the saints connects the name to the Irish tradition of fosterage as a sacred bond, and characters named Íta tend to be women whose greatest achievement is what they enable in those they cherish. The name suits women of fierce spiritual conviction who change the world through the quality of their devotion.
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Famous characters named Ita
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Related names
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.”
Caoimhe
Irish · “Derived from the Irish word "caomh" meaning "gentle", "beautiful", or "precious". The name has been used in Ireland since the early medieval period and is associated with warmth, kindness, and quiet inner beauty. Several Irish saints bore forms of this name, reflecting its long tradition within Irish Christian culture.”
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.”
Eithne
Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "eithne" meaning "kernel" or "grain nucleus" — the innermost, most essential part of a nut or seed. The name carries connotations of concentrated essence and inner worth. Eithne was a popular name in early medieval Ireland, borne by several queens and saints, and appears frequently in genealogies of Irish nobility.”
More Old Irish names
Scáthach
“From the Old Irish "scáth" meaning "shadow" or "shade", with the suffix "-ach" indicating a bearer of that quality. Scáthach is one of the most fascinating figures in Irish mythology — a warrior woman and supernatural teacher who runs a school for heroes on the Isle of Skye (Dún Scáith). She trains Cú Chulainn in the arts of war and is portrayed as nearly omniscient in battle-craft. Her name, the Shadow, suggests someone who operates at the edge of the seen and known world.”
Nuada
“Derived from a Proto-Celtic root possibly related to "cloud" or "mist", or alternatively connected to an element meaning "to acquire" or "to catch". Nuada Airgetlám (Nuada of the Silver Hand) was the first king of the Tuatha Dé Danann in Irish mythology, who lost his hand at the First Battle of Mag Tuired and was temporarily deposed since a blemished king could not rule, until a silver prosthetic hand was crafted for him.”
Ciara
“Derived from the Old Irish "ciar" meaning "dark", "black", or "dark-haired". Saint Ciara of Kilkeary was a sixth-century Irish saint, and the name appears throughout early Irish ecclesiastical records. The meaning reflects an older Celtic aesthetic that prized dark colouring, and the same root gives the male name Ciarán, meaning "little dark one".”
Lír
“From the Old Irish "lir" meaning "sea" or possibly related to the Proto-Celtic sea deity. Lír (or Lir) was the Irish god of the sea and father of the four children who were transformed into swans in the most beloved of Irish mythological tales. The related figure Llyr appears in Welsh mythology in the Mabinogion, and scholars identify him with the legendary British king whose story Shakespeare transformed into King Lear.”
Lochlainn
“Derived from the Old Irish "Lochlainn" meaning "land of the lochs" or "land of the lakes" — the Irish term for Scandinavia (later specifically Norway), the homeland of the Vikings who raided and settled Ireland from the 8th century. As a given name, it was adopted from the place name and came to carry associations with the Norse world and the Viking-Irish cultural fusion of medieval Ireland.”
Aodhán
“A diminutive of Aodh, the Old Irish name for the god of fire (later Anglicised as Hugh). Aodhán means "little fire" and was an extremely common name in early medieval Ireland — Saint Aodhán of Ferns (Aidan of Lindisfarne in the Northumbrian tradition) was a 7th-century Irish monk who founded the famous monastery on Lindisfarne, carrying Celtic Christianity into England. The diminutive form gives it warmth and approachability while retaining the fire quality.”
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