Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Lasairfhíona

Meaning — Derived from the Old Irish elements "lasair" meaning "flame" and "fíon" meaning "wine" — together meaning "flame of wine" or "wine-bright flame". This is an ancient and rare Irish name suggesting the warm glow and intoxicating quality of wine and firelight combined. It was used in medieval Ireland as a poetic name for women of remarkable beauty and vivacity.·Old Irish origin·Female·LAS-ir-EE-na

Lasairfhíona Lasairfhíona is a name of vivid sensory beauty — the warm radiance of flame combined with the heady quality of wine. Characters with this name tend to be intensely vivid presences, people who light up any gathering they enter and whose company has an almost intoxicating quality. The ancient rarity of the name gives it an aristocratic distinction, suited to medieval Irish noblewomen and characters of exceptional beauty and charismatic power.

Best genres for Lasairfhíona

Historical FictionMythologyHistorical RomanceFantasyLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Lasairfhíona

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

LasairfhíonaLasairíona

Pairs well with

Lasairfhíona Ní BhriainLasairfhíona O'BrienLasairfhíona MacAllisterLasairfhíona McCarthyLasairfhíona O'DonnellLasairfhíona Ní Fhaoláin

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Related names

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

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Maeve

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More Old Irish names

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.

Caoilfhinn

Compound Old Irish name from "caol" (slender, narrow) and "fionn" (white, fair, blessed). The name combines physical grace with the light-filled beauty implied by "fionn". It is an authentically traditional Irish name that represents the layered compound structure common in early medieval Irish personal naming. Several saints and noblewomen in medieval Irish records bear this name.

Rónán

Derived from the Old Irish "rón" meaning "seal" combined with the diminutive suffix "-án" — giving the meaning "little seal" or "young seal". In Irish tradition, seals were often believed to be fallen angels or transformed humans (selkies), and the name carries overtones of the liminal space between the natural and supernatural worlds. Several Irish saints bore the name.

Sadhbh

From the Old Irish "sadb" meaning "sweet" or "goodly". In Irish mythology, Sadhbh is the mother of Oisín: she was transformed into a deer by the Dark Druid Fear Doirc and returned to human form when she entered the protection of Fionn mac Cumhaill. Their son Oisín ("little fawn") was born while she was again in deer form after she was recaptured. The name carries both gentleness and the tragedy of transformation.

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.

Niamh

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