Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Maeve

Meaning — Anglicised form of the Irish "Méabh" or "Medb", possibly derived from an Old Irish word meaning "intoxicating" or "she who intoxicates" — connected to "mead" in its associations with sovereignty rituals. Queen Medb of Connacht is one of the most powerful figures in Irish mythology, the warrior queen whose desire for equal status with her husband triggers the great war of the Táin Bó Cúailnge.·Old Irish origin·Female·MAYV

Maeve Maeve is a name of sovereign authority and intoxicating personal power — a character who demands equality and pursues her desires without apology. The mythological Medb's insistence on being beholden to no one, male or female, makes the name ideal for protagonists who refuse the limits others set for them. Characters named Maeve combine magnetic charm with steely resolve, capable of inspiring intense devotion and equally intense opposition.

Best genres for Maeve

Historical FictionFantasyMythologyContemporary FictionLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Maeve

Queen Medb

The Táin Bó Cúailnge Traditional Irish Mythology

The powerful queen of Connacht whose argument with her husband over equal wealth leads her to invade Ulster and trigger the greatest war in Irish mythology.

Maeve

Normal People Sally Rooney

While not directly the same name, the contemporary literary prominence of Maeve as an Irish literary name reflects its enduring cultural currency.


Variations & nicknames

MaeveMéabhMedbMaive

Pairs well with

Maeve O'BrienMaeve ConnollyMaeve FlanaganMaeve GallagherMaeve McCarthyMaeve Boland

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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

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.

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.

Grainne

Old Irish · “Possibly derived from the Old Irish "grán" meaning "grain" or "gráin" meaning "hatred" or "terror", though the exact etymology remains debated. In Irish legend, Gráinne is the passionate, wilful daughter of the High King Cormac mac Airt who refuses her arranged marriage to the aging hero Fionn mac Cumhaill and flees with the young warrior Diarmuid — one of Ireland's great romantic epics.

Deirdre

Old Irish · “The etymology is uncertain, but possible derivations include Old Irish "derdriu" meaning "sorrowful" or "broken-hearted", or alternatively related to a root meaning "wanderer" or "she who chatters". Deirdre is the tragic heroine of one of the Three Sorrows of Storytelling in Irish mythology — the tale of Deirdre of the Sorrows — whose beauty was prophesied to bring ruin to Ulster.


More Old Irish names

Liadan

From the Old Irish "líadan" meaning "grey lady" or "lady of the grey hair", from "lía" (grey) and the feminine suffix. Liadan is the protagonist of one of the most moving love stories in early Irish literature — the tale of Líadan and Cuirithir, two poets who fall in love but whose relationship is destroyed when Líadan takes holy vows, choosing religious devotion at the cost of human love. The surviving lament attributed to her is among the earliest and most beautiful poems in Old Irish.

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.

Granuaile

The Old Irish form of Grace, from "Gráinne" (itself possibly related to "grán", grain or sun) combined with the epithet "Mhaol" (bald, or of the cropped hair). Granuaile (Grace O'Malley, c. 1530–1603) was the legendary Irish chieftain and pirate queen of Connacht who commanded a fleet of ships, led her clan in armed rebellion against English expansion, and famously negotiated face-to-face with Queen Elizabeth I. She became one of the most celebrated figures in Irish folk memory.

Méabh

The older spelling form of Maeve, derived from Old Irish "medb" meaning "she who intoxicates" or "mead" — cognate with the drink associated with sovereignty. Méabh is the great warrior queen of Connacht in the Ulster Cycle, the driving force behind the Táin Bó Cúailnge (Cattle Raid of Cooley). She is one of the most powerful and complex female figures in all Celtic mythology — a queen who commands armies, takes and dismisses husbands at will, and matches her political authority with personal sovereignty.

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.

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.


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