Fun Generators
Login

Knight Name Generator

Fun Generators
Toggle sidebar

Knight Name Generator

Generate authentic medieval knight names complete with chivalric epithets. Names draw from thousands of historically-attested medieval first names — from Frankish and Norman records through Arthurian tradition — paired with evocative titles like "of the Silver Shield", "the Valiant", and "of the Dragon". Perfect for medieval fantasy, historical fiction, heraldry projects, and tabletop RPGs.

Knight Name

Grissall the Tiny
Bella the Mild
Ninon the Reliable
Adelysia of the Dawn
Gonore the Mercyful

About the Knight Name Generator

Knights occupy a unique space in the history of naming — as members of a warrior aristocracy spanning medieval Europe from England to Iberia to the Holy Land, their names draw from the full richness of Latin, Germanic, Norman French, Old English, and Romance traditions. Our Knight Name Generator provides an enormous pool of historically attested first names drawn from medieval knightly records, combined with epithets — the descriptive titles that medieval chroniclers and poets used to distinguish one Sir William from another.

The generator pairs first names (1,739 male and 1,083 female options drawn from historical medieval sources) with epithets in the tradition of medieval naming: "the Bold," "the Brave," "the Black," "of the Rose," "the Ironhanded." These epithets were real — medieval knights were routinely distinguished by such descriptors in chronicles, chansons de geste, and the Arthurian romances that shaped chivalric culture. The result is names that feel genuinely medieval rather than vaguely fantasy.

Whether you need names for Arthurian paladins, crusader knights, tournament competitors, or the guards and lords of your medieval fantasy world, these names carry the authentic weight of the age of chivalry.

Knights in History and Fiction

Historical Knighthood

Knighthood as an institution developed in the Carolingian period (8th–9th centuries) and reached its cultural peak in the 12th–14th centuries. Knights were mounted warriors sworn to service — to a lord, a king, or a religious order. The military orders (Knights Templar, Knights Hospitaller, Teutonic Knights) added a monastic dimension to the warrior tradition. The names in this generator span the full medieval period, drawing from Anglo-Saxon, Norman, Frankish, Germanic, Iberian, and Italian naming conventions as they were actually used by the historical knightly class.

Knights in Literature and Games

The Arthurian legends — from Geoffrey of Monmouth through Chrétien de Troyes to Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur — established the archetype of the knight that persists in fiction today. Lancelot, Gawain, Percival, Tristan, Galahad: these names and their adventures defined chivalric ideals for centuries. In games, knight characters appear throughout the RPG canon: from the Paladin class in D&D to the Order of the Sword in Dragon Age, from the royal guards of The Witcher to the knight archetypes of Fire Emblem. Good knight names in fiction and games carry the gravitas of this long tradition.

How to Use These Names

  • D&D Paladin and Fighter characters: Give your holy warrior or battle-hardened champion a name with genuine medieval resonance rather than a made-up fantasy name.
  • Arthurian fiction and fan fiction: Original knights of the Round Table need names that fit alongside Lancelot and Gawain without sounding out of place.
  • Medieval fantasy worldbuilding: Knights in your novel, game, or setting deserve names drawn from the correct cultural and historical tradition.
  • Tournament NPCs: Medieval tournament participants in your tabletop game need memorable names for the herald to announce.
  • Military order members: Knights Templar analogues, crusader orders, and holy warrior brotherhoods need historically plausible names for their members.
  • Heraldic characters: Every knight on your fictional coat-of-arms roster needs a name that a herald could actually pronounce.

What Makes a Good Knight Name?

Aldric the Ironhanded

Epithet of quality — epithets describing physical or personal attributes were the most common form of medieval knightly distinction, appearing in chronicles, tournament records, and romances.

Isolde the Fierce

Female knight names — while rare historically, female knights and warrior women appear throughout medieval legend (the Amazon tradition, Joan of Arc, the chansons de geste). The generator provides female-specific first names paired with epithets.

Godfrey of the Rose

Locative epithets — "of the [place/object]" epithets were widely used to distinguish knights by their domain, heraldic device, or the event they were associated with.

Example Knight Names

Aldric the Bold Isolde the Fierce Godfrey of the Rose Mathilde the Brave Renaud the Black Sibyl of the Tower Bertrand the Ironhanded Elspeth the Swift Gilles the Steadfast Aelswith of the Dawn Hugues the Red Constance the Unbowed

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these names historically accurate? +
The first names are drawn from historical medieval sources — actual names used by knights, nobles, and warriors across medieval Europe from the Carolingian period through the late Middle Ages. The epithets follow the conventions used in medieval chronicles, tournament records, and chansons de geste. The combinations are fictional but the components are historically grounded.
Can I use these names for Arthurian-inspired characters? +
Yes — the name pool includes names from the same historical and legendary traditions that gave us Lancelot, Gawain, Percival, and Tristan. Generated names will feel at home alongside the canonical Round Table knights without being exact duplicates of famous characters.
What cultures are represented in the name pool? +
The generator draws from the full range of medieval European naming traditions: Anglo-Saxon and Old English, Norman French, Frankish and Germanic, Iberian (Spanish and Portuguese), Italian, and Latin ecclesiastical names. This reflects the reality of medieval knighthood as a pan-European institution, particularly during the Crusades when knights from across the continent fought alongside each other.
Is API access available? +
Yes — FunGenerators provides API access to all generators. See the API documentation on the site for details.
Is this generator free to use? +
Yes, completely free with no usage limits for personal and commercial creative projects.
Are female knight names included? +
Yes — the generator includes a dedicated female name pool of over 1,000 historically attested female medieval names, paired with epithets in the same chivalric tradition. These suit female knights, warrior women, paladins, shield-maidens, and any female character in a medieval or Arthurian setting.