Kimberly (given name) explained

Kimberly
Pronunciation:
Gender:Unisex
Language:English
Language origin:Old English
Origin:Combination of Kimber and leigh
Meaning:"From the meadow of the royal fortress".
Variant:Kimberlee, Kimberleigh, Kimberley (also an Australian form of Kimball)
Shortform:Kim, Kimmie, Kimmi, or Kimmy
See also:Kimberley (surname)

Kimberly (also Kimberley or Kimberlee) is a predominantly unisex given name of Old English origin. John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley, a place in Norfolk, England, popularised the name by giving it to a town in South Africa and a region in Australia. The first element, Kimber, reflects various Old English personal names; in the case of the Earldom in Norfolk this first appeared as Chineburlai in 1086 and seems to mean "clearing of a woman called Cyneburg (Cyneburga in Latin)". The second element is the Old English leah or leigh "meadow, clearing in a woodland".[1]

Origin of the given name

The given name Kimberley is derived from place of Kimberley, in Northern Cape, South Africa. This South African place name was named after Lord Kimberley in the 19th century. At the end of the 19th century, this place was the scene of fighting and a British victory during the Second Boer War, and consequently the given name was popularised in the English-speaking world.

The name of Lord Kimberley's title is derived from Kimberley, in Norfolk, England. This place name is derived from two Old English elements: the first is the feminine personal name Cyneburg, which means "royal fortress"; the second element is lēah, which means "woodland" or "clearing". The place name roughly means: the "woodland clearing of the royal fortress." This place name was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Chineburlai.[2]

Variants

Kimberly is a given name with many variants. Kimberley is used for males and females, while Kimberlee, Kimberleigh, and Kimberli are common feminine variant forms.

The common Korean surname Kim is not related to Kimberley.

Notable people

Women

Men

Fictional characters

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Kimberley&allowed_in_frame=0 "Kimberley"
  2. which cited: