BlueJewels's Personal Name List

Seren
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: SEH-rehn
Rating: 67% based on 7 votes
Means "star" in Welsh. This is a recently created Welsh name.
Rhys
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Welsh, English
Pronounced: REES
Rating: 77% based on 7 votes
From Old Welsh Ris, probably meaning "ardour, enthusiasm". Several Welsh rulers have borne this name, including the 12th-century Rhys ap Gruffydd who fought against the invading Normans.
Rhiannon
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh, English, Welsh Mythology
Pronounced: ri-AN-awn(Welsh) ree-AN-ən(English)
Rating: 51% based on 7 votes
Probably derived from an unattested Celtic name *Rīgantonā meaning "great queen" (Celtic *rīganī "queen" and the divine or augmentative suffix -on). It is speculated that Rigantona was an old Celtic goddess, perhaps associated with fertility and horses like the Gaulish Epona. As Rhiannon, she appears in Welsh legend in the Mabinogi [1] as a beautiful magical woman who rides a white horse. She was betrothed against her will to Gwawl, but cunningly broke off that engagement and married Pwyll instead. Their son was Pryderi.

As an English name, it became popular due to the Fleetwood Mac song Rhiannon (1976), especially in the United Kingdom and Australia.

Owen 1
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Welsh, English
Pronounced: O-in(English)
Rating: 63% based on 7 votes
Anglicized form of Owain.
Morwenna
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Cornish, Welsh
Rating: 46% based on 5 votes
From Old Cornish moroin meaning "maiden, girl" (related to the Welsh word morwyn [1]). This was the name of a 6th-century Cornish saint, said to be one of the daughters of Brychan Brycheiniog.
Gwendolen
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: GWEHN-də-lin(English)
Rating: 33% based on 6 votes
Possibly means "white ring", derived from Welsh gwen meaning "white, blessed" and dolen meaning "ring, loop". This name appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's 12th-century chronicles, written in the Latin form Guendoloena, where it belongs to an ancient queen of the Britons who defeats her ex-husband in battle [1]. Geoffrey later used it in Vita Merlini for the wife of the prophet Merlin [2]. An alternate theory claims that the name arose from a misreading of the masculine name Guendoleu by Geoffrey [3].

This name was not regularly given to people until the 19th century [4][3]. It was used by George Eliot for a character in her novel Daniel Deronda (1876).

Gwen
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh, English
Pronounced: GWEHN
Rating: 33% based on 6 votes
From Welsh gwen, the feminine form of gwyn meaning "white, blessed". It can also be a short form of Gwendolen, Gwenllian and other names beginning with Gwen.
Emrys
Gender: Masculine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: EHM-ris
Rating: 67% based on 6 votes
Welsh form of Ambrose. Emrys Wledig (or Ambrosius Aurelianus) was a Romano-British military leader who fought against the invading Anglo-Saxons in the 5th century. Tales of his life were used by the 12th-century chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth to help shape the early character of Merlin, whom he called Merlinus Ambrosius in Latin.
Eirlys
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: AYR-lis
Rating: 53% based on 6 votes
Means "snowdrop (flower)" in Welsh, a compound of eira "snow" and llys "plant".
Carys
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: KAHR-is
Rating: 55% based on 6 votes
Derived from Welsh caru meaning "love". This is a relatively modern Welsh name, in common use only since the middle of the 20th century.
Avalon
Gender: Feminine
Usage: English (Rare)
Pronounced: AV-ə-lahn
Rating: 56% based on 7 votes
From the name of the island paradise to which King Arthur was brought after his death. The name of this island is perhaps related to Welsh afal meaning "apple", a fruit that was often linked with paradise.
Arianwen
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: ar-YAN-wehn
Rating: 32% based on 5 votes
Derived from Welsh arian "silver" and gwen "white, blessed". This was the name of a 5th-century Welsh saint, one of the supposed daughters of Brychan Brycheiniog.
Anwen
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Rating: 53% based on 6 votes
Means "very beautiful" in Welsh, from the intensive prefix an- combined with gwen "white, blessed".
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