This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Origin and meaning of Iselin or Iselinn?
in reply to a message by Ylva
vote up1vote down

Replies

Iselinde and IsengardInteresting. To me, a form of Iselinde sounds most plausible. Is Iselinde used at all in Germany nowadays?Isengard makes me think of The Lord of the Ring."You sought a flower and found a fruit. You sought a spring and found a sea. You sought a woman and found a soul. You are disappointed."
"It does not become me to make myself smaller than I am." (Edith Södergran 1891-1923)
vote up1vote down
I've never met a person named Iselinde or Isengard, and they sound very old fashioned, so I'd be surprised to meet anybody with one of these names who's younger than 60 - but you can still find them in some good name books.Traditional Old High German names like Iselinde and Isengard are very old fashioned in Germany at the moment, and I'm sure it'll take a while until they will return. Nowadays, at least in the north of the country, old Low German, Frisian and Scandinavian variant forms of those old fashioned names are really modern again, e.g. Isa, Iska and Iske which are Low German pet forms for "Isen-"-names./ Satuhttp://www.nordicnames.de/
vote up1vote down
Same "linde" as in Rosalind and Sieglinde, I assumeWhich means "soft". Though I've also read that "lind" has something to with serpents or dragons. The old Nordic name Lindorm means "dragon". The modern Swedish "lind" means lime-tree."You sought a flower and found a fruit. You sought a spring and found a sea. You sought a woman and found a soul. You are disappointed."
"It does not become me to make myself smaller than I am." (Edith Södergran 1891-1923)
vote up1vote down
Same in German: "lind" means "soft" (originally: pliant, flexible). The wood of the lime-tree (Linde) is very flexible and so is the "Lindwurm". Others say that the tree got its name from its soft bast.
vote up1vote down