Meaning & History
Historical and Linguistic Background
The name Ansuwaldaz is not directly attested in any historical texts because it existed before the separate Germanic languages were written down. Linguists reconstruct it on the basis of later recorded forms across the Germanic languages. The Old English name Osweald eventually developed into Oswald, a name borne by several notable figures, including Saint Oswald, the 7th-century King of Northumbria, and Saint Oswald of Worcester, who was of Danish ancestry. The Old Norse equivalent, Ásvaldr, uses the element áss (god) reflecting the same structure.
The name fell out of use in the Middle Ages but was revived in the 19th century in the form Oswald. Across cultures, variants have appeared: Osvald in Swedish, Ossie/Ozzie in English, and the Proto-Germanic root gave rise to various refashionings. As a reconstructed form, Ansuwaldaz represents the linguistic reconstruction of a name shared by the ancestor of many modern Norse, English, and German names.
- Meaning: "God-ruler" or "divinely mighty"
- Origin: Proto-Germanic
- Type: First name (masculine)
- Usage Regions: Historical Germanic tribes, reconstructed