The baby name In Old Norse: Yngvildr is a Female name , 2 syllables long and is pronounced Old Norse IPA: /ˈyŋɡvɪldr/; approximate English: YNG-gvildr (YNG like 'ying' with rounded vowel, 'gvildr' ≈ 'gvild').
In Old Norse: Yngvildr is Norse in Origin.
The baby name In Old Norse: Yngvildr is a Female name , 2 syllables long and is pronounced Old Norse IPA: /ˈyŋɡvɪldr/; approximate English: YNG-gvildr (YNG like 'ying' with rounded vowel, 'gvildr' ≈ 'gvild').
In Old Norse: Yngvildr is Norse in Origin.
Yngvildr is an Old Norse feminine name formed from Yngvi (a theonym for the fertility god Freyr and ancestor of the Yngling dynasty) + Hildr “battle.” In compound, the medial h drops and vowels contract, yielding Yngvildr; the sense is “Yngvi’s battle” or “battle-maiden of Yngvi,” typical of theophoric warrior-name patterns in Norse anthroponymy. The elements trace to Proto-Germanic *Ing(w)u- and *hildiz, long productive across Germanic naming.
Used across the Viking Age and medieval Scandinavia, the name appears in saga-era records and follows the broader popularity of -hildr compounds. In modern Scandinavia it survives chiefly in Norway as Ingvild and Yngvild, with Ingvill and Ingvil as spelling or short forms; Swedish and Danish cognates include the rarer Ingvild and Inghild. Related names built on the same second element include Gunnhild and Ragnhild, underscoring a martial, aristocratic tone that has supported periodic revivals.
In Old Norse: Yngvildr is absent from every birth registry and name dataset we follow. It's the kind of name that tends to be rare, regional, or newly made up. Whichever it is, scarcely anyone else carries it.
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