Meaning & Origin
EtymologyWinoc is a variant of the Breton name Gwenneg, which is derived from the Breton word gwenn meaning "white, blessed" combined with a diminutive suffix. The name is closely associated with Saint Gwenneg, an 8th-century monk of Brittany.Notable BearersThe most prominent figure associated with this name is Winnoc (c. 640–c. 716/717), an abbot or prior of Wormhout in Flanders, who is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church. According to medieval hagiographies, Winnoc is generally called a Breton, but the Bollandist Charles De Smedt argued that he was more probably of Welsh origin. He is said to have been of noble birth, possibly from the same house as the kings of Domnonia, and some sources suggest his father was Judicael. His family may have fled to Brittany to escape the Saxons, where he was raised and educated. He is also said to have founded an oratory at St Winnow in Cornwall, although this toponym may be linked to another Breton saint, Winwaloe.Winnoc arrived in Flanders with three companions and founded a monastery at Sint-Winoksbergen (modern-day Bergues). He later moved to the Monastery of Sithiu, then ruled by Bertin, and eventually became the abbot of Wormhout. His cult was particularly strong in northern France and Belgium.Cultural SignificanceThe name Winoc, along with its variant forms like Gwenneg, belongs to a broader Celtic onomastic tradition where gwenn-derived names express purity or blessedness. The popularity of Saint Winnoc in the medieval period contributed to the name's usage in Brittany and Flanders.Meaning: variant of Gwenneg, "white, blessed"Origin: BretonUsage: Primarily in Brittany and historically in Flanders