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Norse names - Baby names with the origin Norse

Showing 50 of 1,103 names
Name Meaning Origins Gender Popularity (last 10y)
Brokk From an Old Norse/Old English word meaning "badger"; name of a dwarf in Norse mythology. English, Norse Boy
Brunhild From elements meaning 'armor' (brun) + 'battle' (hild) - 'armored warrior' or 'battle maiden'. Norse Girl
Brunhilda From brun ('armor' or 'brown') + hild ('battle'): 'armored warrior' or 'brown battle-maid' Norse Girl
Brunnhilda Armored warrior; from elements meaning 'armor' (brynn/brun) + 'battle' (hildr) Germanic, Norse Girl
Brunnhildah From brun ('brown' or 'armor') + hild ('battle'): 'armored warrior' or 'battle-maiden'. Norse Girl
Bryndis From Old Norse elements 'brynja' (mail coat, armor) + 'dís' (goddess, woman) - 'armored woman' or 'armor-goddess' Icelandic, Norse Girl
Bryngerd Armored protection (from bryn 'mail/armor' + gerd/gerð 'enclosure, protection') Germanic, Norse Girl
Brynhild Armored warrior / armored battle Norse Girl
Brynhilda Mail-clad warrior; from elements meaning 'armor' (brynja) + 'battle' (hildr) Germanic, Norse Girl
Brynhildah Armored battle-maiden - from brynja (armor) + hildr (battle); 'armored warrior.' Norse Girl
Brynhylde Armored warrior (from brynja 'coat of mail' + hildr 'battle') Germanic, Norse Girl
Brynje Coat of mail; mail shirt; armor Norse, Norwegian Girl
Brynjolf Armored wolf (from brynja 'mail/armor' + ulfr 'wolf') Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Brynjulf Armored wolf (from Old Norse brynja 'coat of mail, armour' + ulfr 'wolf') Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Brynolfur Armored wolf - from Old Norse brynja 'mail/armor' + ulfr 'wolf'. Norse Boy
Bue From Old Norse Búi meaning “dweller” or “resident” (in Danish the common word 'bue' also means 'bow'). Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Burghild Burg (fortress, protection) + hild (battle) - 'fortress battle' or 'protected in battle' Norse Girl
Byrger Helper, protector; one who saves or aids Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Byrghir Helper; protector; savior (from Old Norse bjarga 'to help, to save') Norse Boy
Byrgir 'Helper' or 'protector' - associated with Old Norse elements meaning to save or a stronghold. Icelandic, Norse Boy
Byrk Birch (the birch tree) Icelandic, Norse, Scandinavian Unisex
Byrn Possible meanings include 'descendant of Bran (raven)' (Irish), 'bear' or 'warrior' (Scandinavian/Old English), or 'mail-shirt/armour' (Old Norse/Old English) English, Norse Boy
Canute Knot Norse Boy
Carr Dweller by the marsh or brushwood; in some Gaelic origins associated with rock/stone Norse Boy
Christeinn Christ's stone (Christian + steinn 'stone') Icelandic, Norse Boy
cnut Knot Norse Boy
Cnute Knot Norse Boy
Colbrand Coal + brand (brand = sword/firebrand) - roughly 'coal-sword' or 'dark sword' English, Norse Boy
Colbrant From Germanic elements meaning 'kol' (coal, dark) + 'brand' (sword, fire) - roughly 'dark/coal sword' or 'black fire'. Germanic, Norse Boy
Core Various: 'heart' (from Latin cor), 'hollow/cauldron' (from Gaelic coire), or from Old Norse Kori ('curly-haired'); also evokes 'core' (center). English, Gaelic, Irish, Latin, Norse Unisex
Daene Person from Denmark (primary); occasionally 'valley' if from Deane. English, Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Dag Day Norse Boy
Dagfinn From Old Norse elements dag 'day' + finn 'Finn' - roughly 'day Finn' or 'daylight Finn'. Norse, Scandinavian Boy
Dagfinnr From Old Norse dag 'day' + finnr 'Finn' - literally 'day-Finn', generally understood as 'day's Finn' or 'bright Finn'. Norse Boy
daggur Dew, dewdrop Icelandic, Norse Boy
Dagmara Day maiden Norse Girl
Dagna New day / new dawn Norse, Polish Girl
Dagnah New day Norse Girl
Dagnanna Compound of 'Dag' (day) and 'Nanna' (Norse goddess/name) - roughly 'day-goddess' or 'bright day / day's Nanna'. Norse, Scandinavian Girl
Dagnee New day Norse, Scandinavian Girl
Dagniah New day Norse Girl
Dagnija New day Norse Girl
Dagomar Likely from dag 'day' + mār 'famous/renowned' - roughly 'famous day' or 'renowned in the day'. Germanic, Norse Boy
Delling Dawn; the shining one (personification of the dawn) Norse Boy
Dis From Old Norse dís meaning 'goddess', 'lady', or a protective female spirit; in Latin Dīs is the name/epithet of the god of the underworld (Dis Pater), associated with the dead and with riches. English, Latin, Norse Unisex
Disa From Old Norse dís - 'goddess', 'lady', a female spirit or noble woman Norse, Scandinavian Girl
Draike Dragon (primary); historically also 'male duck' (Middle English) English, Latin, Norse Boy
Draupnir The dripper; "that which drips" Norse Unisex
Dreng Young man; valiant warrior English, Norse Boy
Earlan Likely 'related to an earl' (nobleman) or a variant of Erland meaning 'foreigner/foreign land'. English, Norse Boy

Norse name popularity over time

Aggregated births across United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany for every Norse-origin name in our dataset.

1,103
Names in this origin
18
With data in 2025
0
Births 2025
112,163
Peak year 0