Gotthold
Masculine
German
Meaning & Origin
Gotthold is a German given name originating from the 17th century, formed from the elements Gott "God" and hold "gracious, graceful, loyal". It belongs to a family of theistic Germanic names such as Gottfried, Gotthelf, Gotthilf, Gottheil, Gottlieb, Gottschalk, and Gottwald, all reflecting religious devotion in the era of Pietism.
Notable Bearers
The mathematician Gotthold Eisenstein (1823–1852) made contributions to number theory and analysis, lending his name to Eisenstein integers. The writer and painter Gotthold Gloger (1924–2001) was a German artist and children's author. The poet Samuel Gotthold Lange (1711–1781) was a lyricist and translator of Anacreon. The most famous bearer is the dramatist and critic Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781), a key figure of the Enlightenment whose plays Nathan the Wise and Emilia Galotti are enduring classics, and who also wrote philosophical and theological works. Rabbi and politician Gotthold Salomon (1784–1862) was a Bible translator and a leader of the Jewish community in Hamburg. The bass-baritone singer and conductor Gotthold Schwarz (born 1952) succeeded Albrecht Dürr as Thomaskantor in Leipzig. As a surname, it attained tragic notoriety in Helene Gotthold (1896–1944), a Jehovah's Witness executed by the Nazi regime for resistance.
Cultural Context
The name exemplifies the creative onomastics of 17th-century German-speaking Protestantism, which devised compound names expressing divine attributes as virtues.
Meaning: "God is gracious" (Gott + hold)
Origin: German
Type: Given name (also found as surname)
Usage: Mainly German, especially from the 17th–19th centuries