Gwendolen Explained
Gwendolen |
Gender: | Female |
Meaning: | "blessed ring" |
Language: | English, Welsh |
Origin: | possibly from Welsh gwen = "white, holy/blessed" + dolen = "loop, link, ring" |
Alternative Spelling: | Guendolen, Gwendoline, Gwendolyn, Gwendolin |
Nickname: | Gwen, Wendy, Winnie |
Gwendolen is a feminine given name, in general use only since the 19th century.[1]
It has come to be the standard English form of Latin Guendoloena, which was first used by Geoffrey of Monmouth as the name of a legendary British queen in his History of the Kings of Britain . He reused the name in his Life of Merlin (c. 1150) for a different character, the wife of the titular magician "Merlinus", a counsellor to King Arthur; the metre shows that Geoffrey pronounced it as a pentasyllable, Guĕndŏlŏēnă, with the "gu" pronounced pronounced as //ɡw//. Dr. Arthur Hutson suggests that "Guendoloena" arose from a misreading of the old Welsh masculine name Guendoleu; Geoffrey may have mistaken the final U for an N, then Latinized *Guendolen as a feminine name to arrive at Guendoloena. In the Vita Merlini, however, Geoffrey Latinizes the masculine name of Gwenddoleu ap Ceidio as Guennolous.Spelled Gwendoloena, the name reoccurs in the anonymous Latin romance De Ortu Waluuanii belonging to Arthur's queen Guinevere.
It did not become a common English given name until the 19th century. Gwendoline was in use in England by the 1860s (an early example being Lady Gwendoline Anson, born c. 1837, a daughter of the 1st Earl of Lichfield),[2] and Gwendolen appeared in Daniel Deronda, written by George Eliot and published in serialized form 1874–6.
Notable bearers
People
- Gwendolen Margaret Carter (1906–1991), Canadian scholar of African affairs
- Gwendolen Mary "Gwen" John (1876–1939), Welsh painter
- Gwendolen Fer (born 1986), french Equestrian rider
- Gwendolen Fitzalan-Howard, Duchess of Norfolk (1877–1945), British duchess
- Gwendolen Guinness, Countess of Iveagh (1881–1966), Conservative politician in the United Kingdom
- Gwendolen "Len" Howard (1894–1973), British naturalist and musician
- Joyce Gwendolen Quin (born 1944), Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom
- Gwendolen Mary "Gwen" Raverat (1885–1957), English wood engraver
- F. Gwendolen Rees (1906–1994), British zoologist and parasitologist
- Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams (1890–1979), novelist from Dominica
- Guendalina Sastri (born 1953), Italian actress and singer
- Gwendoline Christie (born 1978), English actress and model
Fictional characters
- Gwendolen, mythical queen of the Britons
- Guendoloena (Gwendolen), Merlin's wife in the Life of Merlin
- Guendolen, the fairy mistress of King Arthur and mother of Gyneth in Sir Walter Scott's work The Bridal of Triermain (1813)
- Gwendolen, loathly lady in Reginald Heber's Fragments of The Masque of Gwendolen (written 1816, published 1830)
- Gwendolen Harleth, heroine in Daniel Deronda (1876), the last novel George Eliot completed
- Gwendolen Fairfax, a major character in Oscar Wilde's comedy The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)
- Gwendolen, a tragic, snobbish novelist in Henry James's 1896 short story The Figure in the Carpet
- Gwendolen Vincent Lesley, Marigold's second cousin in L. M. Montgomery's novel Magic for Marigold
- Gwendolen, the mistress of Thomas Becket and Prince Henry II in Jean Anouilh's play Becket (1959)
- Gwendolen Chant, antagonist in Diana Wynne Jones' fantasy novel Charmed Life (1977)
- Gwendolyn Tennyson, supporting protagonist in the Cartoon Network animated show, Ben 10
- Gwendolen, a dragon in The Last Dragon Chronicles
- Gwendolin, a hero character from Bloons TD 6
- Gwendolyne "Gwen" Stacy, Marvel Comics character, the first romantic interest of Spider-Man
Other
See also
References
Footnotes
Citations
- Web site: McMaster . Jodi . Concerning the Name Gwendolyn, Gwendolen, or Gwendoline . MedievalScotland.org . 4 October 1999 . 7 January 2013.
- Sheard, K. M. (2011),, p. 262, .