Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Walburga

Meaning — Walburga is an Old High German feminine name composed of "waltan" meaning "to rule, to have power" and "burg" meaning "fortress, stronghold". It thus means "powerful fortress" or "ruling strength". Saint Walburga (c. 710–779) was an Anglo-Saxon missionary nun who became the abbess of Heidenheim in Bavaria; she is venerated widely in Germany, and Walpurgis Night (April 30) is named in her honour.·Old High German origin·Female·val-BOOR-gah

Walburga Walburga is a weighty, archaic Germanic name with strong associations to medieval Christianity and the liminal feast of Walpurgis Night. Characters bearing this name project ancient authority — whether as abbesses, sorceresses, or stern matriarchs. The name has a forbidding grandeur that suits historical settings and dark fantasy equally well.

Best genres for Walburga

Historical FictionFantasyHorrorMythology

Famous characters named Walburga

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


Variations & nicknames

WalburgaWalpurgaWalburgisWalpurgis

Pairs well with

Walburga von SteinWalburga GrünewaldWalburga KaufmannWalburga RichterWalburga Bauer

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Related names

Brunhilde

Germanic/Old Norse · “A Germanic feminine name composed of "brun" meaning "armour" or "brown" (as in the colour of iron) and "hild" meaning "battle" — thus "armoured for battle" or "battle-warrior". The name is borne by one of the most powerful figures in Germanic heroic legend: Brynhildr, the shield-maiden (valkyrie) of the Volsunga saga and the Nibelungenlied, whose love for Sigurd/Siegfried and betrayal by him precipitates catastrophe.

Hildegard

Old High German · “A Germanic feminine name composed of "hild" meaning "battle" and "gard" meaning "enclosure", "stronghold", or "protection" — thus "battle-stronghold" or "protected in battle". Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179) was a Benedictine abbess, visionary mystic, composer, natural philosopher, and medical writer — one of the most remarkable intellectual figures of the Middle Ages and now a Doctor of the Catholic Church.

Gertrude

Germanic · “A Germanic feminine name composed of "ger" meaning "spear" and "þrúðr" meaning "strength" — thus "spear-strength" or "the strength of the spear". The name was borne by Saint Gertrude of Nivelles (626–659), the patron of travellers and gardeners, and Saint Gertrude the Great (1256–c.1302), the mystical theologian. Its literary association is dominated by Gertrude, Queen of Denmark in Shakespeare's Hamlet.

Adelheid

Old High German · “A Germanic feminine name composed of "adal" meaning "noble" and "heid" meaning "kind", "type", or "appearance" — thus "of noble kind" or "noble type". It is the original Germanic form of the name that became Adelaide in French and English. The name was borne by Saint Adelaide of Italy (931–999), Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, and by Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, Queen consort of William IV of Britain.


More Old High German names

Berta

Berta is a short form of Roberta or Alberta, or a standalone diminutive of Bertha, which derives from the Old High German "Berahta" from "beraht" meaning "bright, shining, famous". The element "beraht" is cognate with Old English "beorht" and appears in many Germanic names. Saint Berta of Kent was a Frankish princess who married King Æthelberht of Kent in the 6th century.

Walther

A Germanic masculine name composed of "wald" meaning "rule" or "power" and "heri" meaning "army" or "warrior" — thus "ruler of the army" or "powerful warrior". The name was widespread across the medieval German-speaking world and was borne by Walther von der Vogelweide (c.1170–c.1230), the greatest of the Middle High German minnesingers, whose lyric poetry defined the courtly love tradition in the German language.

Enno

Enno is a Low German and Frisian masculine name, a short form of names beginning with the Old High German element "agi" or "agni" (edge of a sword) or alternatively a pet form of names beginning with "erm-" or "irm-" (whole, great). It was common in medieval East Frisia and the Low Countries, where several Frisian chieftains bore the name. It remains in use in northern Germany and the Netherlands.

Hildebrand

A Germanic masculine name composed of "hild" meaning "battle" and "brand" meaning "sword", "fire-brand", or "burning sword" — thus "battle-sword" or "flaming battle". Hildebrand is a central figure in the Germanic heroic tradition, appearing in the Old High German Hildebrandslied (the oldest surviving German heroic poem, c.820 CE) as the mentor and weapons-master of Dietrich von Bern, forced into single combat with his own son after years of exile.

Eckhard

A Germanic masculine name composed of "ek" or "ag" meaning "edge" (of a sword) and "hard" meaning "brave", "hardy", or "strong" — thus "strong at the sword's edge" or "brave blade". The name is philosophically significant through Meister Eckhart (c.1260–c.1328), the Dominican theologian and mystic whose sermons on the inner life of the soul were among the most intellectually radical of the Middle Ages.

Frits

Frits is a Dutch, Danish, and Norwegian masculine name, a diminutive of Frederik or Friedrich, which derives from the Old High German "Fridurih", composed of "fridu" meaning "peace" and "rih" meaning "ruler, power". It thus means "peaceful ruler" or "ruler of peace". The name was borne by the Hohenzollern dynasty, including Frederick the Great of Prussia, whose informal German nickname was "Der Alte Fritz" (Old Fritz).


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