Anwen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anwen |
|
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Region of Origin | Wales |
Origin | Welsh language |
Related names | Anwyn (masculine form) |
Wikipedia articles | All pages beginning with Anwen |
Anwen is a Welsh female name. There are a number of English translations for the name's meaning, the most common is Very Beautiful, other translations include fair, pure and white.
[edit] Similar sounding names
Anwen is not a very common name, though neither is it rare and it can be found in most Welsh baby naming books. Many people, however, have confused the name with the name Arwen from JRR Tolkien's Lord Of The Rings. The name Arwen means noble maiden in Sindarin.
Other similar sounding names include:
- Branwen - Bran = Crow & Gwen = White (ƒ)
- Tanwen - Tân = Fire & Gwen = White (ƒ)
- Bronwen - Bron = Breast & Gwen = White (ƒ)
- Dwynwen - Dwyn = to steal & Gwen = White (ƒ)
Dwynwen is the Welsh saint of love, whose name is given to Dydd Santes Dwynwen, which is celebrated on the 25th of January and is the Welsh equivalent to Valentine's Day.
Note: the g in gwen is dropped in a mutation of the word as the word follows a consonant.
Gwen, although literally meaning White, is often used as part of a name to denote 'fair' or 'holy'.
[edit] Variations
Colour names in the Welsh language, as in may other languages including French, have masculine and feminine forms. The masculine version of the name is Anwyn, coming from the word Gwyn = White (m) , but outside of Wales, this is often viewed as a variant spelling of Anwen. Some people have argued that Anwen in itself could be interpreted as a variation on names such as Gwen, due to the shared meaning of white, particularly as "Angwen" (the unmutated form) is sometimes given as a variant.
[edit] As a surname
Although it is possible to have the name Anwen as a surname, it is even more rarely used in this way than it is as a first name.