Certificate of Name
Svanhildr
Feminine
Norse, Old Norse
Meaning & Origin
EtymologySvanhildr is the Old Norse form of Svanhild, a name derived from the Old Norse elements svanr 'swan' and hildr 'battle'. This name is a Scandinavian cognate of the Old German Swanhild, which combines the elements swan 'swan' and hilt 'battle'. The name thus evokes the imagery of a graceful yet combative figure, a duality reflected in the legends surrounding its notable bearer.Mythological SignificanceIn Germanic heroic legend, Svanhildr is the daughter of the great hero Sigurd and the valkyrie Gudrun. According to the legend recorded in the Völsunga saga, the Poetic Edda, and other sources, she was regarded as 'the most beautiful of all women'. She was married to Ermanaric (Old Norse: Jörmunrekkr), the king of the Goths. However, she was falsely accused of having an affair with the king's son, Randver, and was killed in a traumatic manner—trampled to death by horses on Ermanaric's orders. Her tragic death became a central plot point in several medieval Germanic works. In revenge for her brother Randver's execution and Svanhildr's death, her half-brothers Hamdir and Sörli attacked Ermanaric, an event recorded in the Old Norse poems Hamðismál and Guðrúnarhvöt, in Bragi Boddason's skaldic poem Ragnarsdrápa, and in the Danish Latin history Gesta Danorum. Her story also appears in the early 6th-century work of the historian Jordanes, who writes that Ermanaric, king of the Goths, had a woman named Sunilda (an earlier version of Svanhildr) torn apart by wild horses for her husband's betrayal.Historical and Cultural ContextThe name Svanhildr and its variants occur throughout early medieval Europe, albeit mainly in Germanic-speaking areas. The historical records attest to a prototype Swanhild (or Swanachild) who was the second wife of the Frankish ruler Charles Martel in the 8th century. The name has modern-day descendants such as the Icelandic Svanhildur and the German forms Schwanhild, Swanhild, Swanhilda, Swanhilde, and the older Swanahilda. The name's underlying meaning as swan+battle suggests that it belonged originally to a mythological or aristocratic tradition, linking gentleness or beauty (swan) with warfare (battle). This mix of elegance and ferocity makes Svanhildr a striking example of early Germanic name composition.MEANING: Perhaps 'swan-battle' (from Old Norse svanr 'swan' and hildr 'battle')ORIGIN: Old NorseTYPE: First nameUSAGE REGIONS: Old Norse
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