Certificate of Name
Winfrið
Masculine
Anglo-Saxon
Meaning & Origin
Winfrið is the Old English form of the name Winfred, derived from the elements wine (meaning "friend") and friþ (meaning "peace"). This Anglo-Saxon name thus carried the literal sense of "friend of peace" long before the Norman Conquest introduced new naming fashions. It was the original birth name of one of the most influential missionaries of the early Middle Ages: Boniface, the 8th-century Anglo-Saxon evangelist known as the "Apostle of Germany". Historical Significance Born around 672 in Crediton, Devon, Winfrið changed his name to the Latin Bonifatius (from bonum "good" and fatum "fate") upon his consecration as a missionary bishop, perhaps to reflect his new vocation and to be intelligible to Continental audiences. Under the papal name Boniface, he went on to evangelize Frisia and Hessia, helping to reorganize the Frankish Church under Pope Gregory III, and was martyred in 754 at Dokkum. Because of this saint's towering legacy, the form Winfrið (or its later spelling Winfrith) has occasionally been used in modern English revivals, though it remains far less common than the Latinised Boniface or the later English Winfred. Linguistic Development and Variants Winfrið was one of many Old English names formed with the element -friþ (peace). After the Norman Conquest, such names were largely displaced by Norman and Latin alternatives, but monastic chronicles continued to record the Anglo-Saxon form for historical figures. The modern Continental variant, Winfried (German), preserves the same Old Frankish roots, while the post-Conquest English revival Winfred survives as a direct cognate. A feminine counterpart, Winifred (ultimately from Old English Wynfrið "joy and peace"), is more common in modern use, but the masculine ancestral forms remain a link to the earliest English Christian names. Meaning: "friend of peace" (wine + friþ) Origin: Anglo-Saxon (Old English) Notable bearer: Saint Boniface (Winfrið), 8th-century missionary Usage regions: Old England, revived rarely in later English
Back