Certificate of Name
Gauti
Masculine
Old Norse
Meaning & Origin
Gauti is an Old Norse given name, the original form of the Swedish Göte, derived from the tribal name gautr meaning "Geat,” a member of the North Germanic tribe from present-day Götaland in Sweden. Etymology and Historical Context The name Gauti originates from Proto-Germanic *Gautaz, meaning "to pour,” possibly linked to the river Göta älv at Gothenburg. The Geats (Old Norse: gautar) were one of the progenitor tribes that shaped early Scandinavian history, often tied to the legendary figure Gaut or Gautr, a mythical ancestor in Germanic origin myths. The ethnonym *Gautaz is related to the Goths (Gut-þiuda) and the Gutes of Gotland, reflecting a shared linguistic and cultural heritage. By extension, Gauti was a name to describe a Geatish man or one descended from them. Legendary Figure In medieval Scandinavian legends, Gauti appears as an eponymous ancestor or national god. The oldest attestations are in Norse mythological sources like the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, where Gautr functions as an epithet for Odin, connecting him to the tribal forefather. Additional medieval genealogies (e.g., in Hversu Noregr byggðist) list Gauti as a mythological king and progenitor of the Geatish people, marking the tribe’s identity in mythic pedigree. Linguistic variants in Scandinavian The English name Jocelyn is unrelated — that trace(s? no) follows a separate Germanic root Gaut‑ → Josse, therefore irrelevant here. Distribution in later usage In modern Iceland, the name Gauti still occurs after Gaute survives in some regions across Norway. The name occasional usage via a direct Old Norse incarnation historically common Northern Europe amid renals stemming from connection to ancestral origins legends them. Meaning: "Geat” (member of the North Germanic tribe) Origin: Old Norse (Gautr) Type: First name Usage regions: Scandinavia (Old Norse)
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