Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Maxwell

Meaning — A Scottish surname from a place name: Mack's weil or "Mack's pool" — from the personal name Mack (a contracted form of Magnus, meaning "great") and the Old English waell, "pool" or "spring." The Maxwell clan was a powerful Scottish border family, and the name transferred to use as a given name in the 19th century. It carries strong Scottish associations alongside a polished, somewhat aristocratic English register.·Old English origin·Male·MAKS-wel

Maxwell Maxwell projects composed authority and intellectual self-assurance — it is a name for characters who wear competence lightly and tend to be at the top of whatever professional hierarchy they inhabit. The full name reads as formal and slightly imposing; the shortened Max brings it warmly down to earth, giving the name a useful dual register for writers.

Best genres for Maxwell

Historical FictionLiterary FictionThrillerContemporary Fiction

Famous characters named Maxwell

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


Variations & nicknames

MaxwellMaxMaxie

Pairs well with

Maxwell AldridgeMaxwell ForsytheMaxwell PembertonMaxwell SinclairMaxwell WhitfieldMaxwell Ashford

Writing a character named Maxwell?

Hearth's distraction-free editor helps you develop characters and write every day.

Start writing free

More Old English names

Furman

From the English surname Furman, possibly derived from the Old English forman meaning "ferryman" or from a Germanic root meaning "leader, foremost man" (related to the German Fuhrmann meaning "coachman, driver"). The surname became a given name in American usage, particularly in the American South, often used to honor family surnames.

Braxton

An English surname derived from a place name — Bracca's tun in Old English, meaning "Bracca's settlement" or "farmstead," where Bracca is a personal name possibly from an Old Norse root. It transferred to use as a given name in the United States, particularly in the South, during the 19th and 20th centuries. General Braxton Bragg, a Confederate commander, made the name broadly known in American history.

Sonny

An American English nickname derived from son, ultimately from the Old English sunu, meaning "son" or "male child." Sonny has been used as an affectionate term of address for young men since the 19th century and became an independent given name in the United States in the early 20th century. It carries an easy, warm informality and a distinctly American vernacular charm.

Clay

From the Old English clæg, meaning "clay" — the dense, fine-grained mineral earth. As a surname, Clay identified someone who lived near or worked with clayey soil. It transferred to given-name use in the American South and West, partly through association with statesman Henry Clay, the "Great Compromiser" of 19th-century American politics. The name carries elemental, earthy connotations alongside a clean, spare American sound.

Bradly

A variant spelling of Bradley, from the Old English Brādlēah, meaning "broad meadow" or "broad clearing" — from brād ("broad") and lēah ("meadow," "clearing," or "woodland clearing"). Bradley became a common English surname from the medieval period and transferred to given-name use in the 19th century. The Bradly spelling is a simplified American variant that drops one L.

Dean

From the Old English denu, meaning "valley," referring to someone who lived in or near a valley. It was also an occupational surname denoting a dean — an ecclesiastical or academic official — from the Old French doyen and Latin decanus, "head of ten." As a given name it became popular in America during the 20th century, partly through the fame of actor James Dean.


Explore more