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Welsh Name Generator

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Welsh Name Generator

Generate authentic Welsh names — the personal names in contemporary use in Wales, combining the distinctively Welsh given names that survive from the medieval Celtic tradition with the modern English and Welsh surnames common across the country. Wales has maintained a remarkably strong naming culture, with Welsh-language first names experiencing a major revival since the late twentieth century. Welsh given names include some of Europe's oldest surviving personal names. Male names like Dafydd (Welsh form of David), Rhodri (wheel-king), Owain (from the Latin Eugenius), Gruffydd (strong lord), Huw (Welsh Hugh), Iestyn (Justin), and Emrys carry centuries of Welsh history and legend — Owain and Emrys are names of Arthurian legend. Female names like Carys (love), Cerys (love), Seren (star), Nia (brightness), Ffion (foxglove), Angharad (greatly loved), Rhiannon (divine queen), and Bronwen (fair breast) are celebrated across Welsh culture and mythology. Contemporary Welsh naming also draws from the same English first-name pool as the rest of Britain. Welsh surnames are dominated by the patronymic forms that emerged when Wales adopted hereditary surnames: Jones (from John), Williams (from William), Davies (from David), Evans (from Evan/John), Roberts, and Hughes reflect this heritage. This generator produces authentic Welsh first names paired with Welsh and English-Welsh surnames.

Welsh Name

Nicole Parry
Tomas Dickinson
Danielle Hughes
James Holmes
Tyler Davis

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About the Welsh Name Generator

The Welsh Name Generator produces authentic names from Wales — combining distinctively Welsh given names from the Celtic tradition with the Welsh and English surnames in common use across the country today. Wales has one of Europe's most active linguistic revival movements, with Welsh-language first names enjoying a powerful resurgence since the late twentieth century alongside the growth of Welsh-medium education and Welsh cultural identity.

Welsh given names include some of Europe's oldest continuously used personal names. Male names like Dafydd (Welsh form of David), Rhodri (wheel-king), Owain (from Eugenius — the name of Arthurian legend), Gruffydd (strong lord), Huw (Welsh Hugh), Iestyn (Justin), Carwyn (blessed love), and Emrys (immortal) carry centuries of Welsh history, literature, and legend. The medieval Welsh Arthurian tradition — preserved in the Mabinogion and Geoffrey of Monmouth's writings — preserved names like Owain, Peredur, and Cei that are still used today.

Welsh female names are among the most beautiful in European naming traditions. Carys and Cerys (both from câr, love), Seren (star), Nia (brightness, from Irish Niamh), Ffion (foxglove), Angharad (greatly loved), Rhiannon (divine queen, from the Mabinogion), Branwen (white/blessed raven, also from the Mabinogion), and Lowri (Laura) are all deeply Welsh names with rich mythological and cultural associations. Contemporary Welsh naming also uses many standard English names alongside these distinctively Welsh ones.

Welsh Surnames and Their Origins

Welsh surnames have a fascinating history. Wales was among the last parts of Britain to adopt fixed hereditary surnames — the Welsh patronymic system (using "ap/ab" meaning "son of" and "ferch/verch" meaning "daughter of") was in widespread use until the 16th–18th centuries. When hereditary surnames were finally adopted, most Welsh families took a fixed form of their father's name: "ap Rhys" became Price or Prees, "ap Howell" became Powell, "ap Hugh" became Pugh, "ap Owen" became Bowen, and "ab Evan" became Bevan.

The Most Common Welsh Surnames

Jones is consistently the most common surname in Wales, derived from Jonah/John via the Welsh form Ieuan. Williams (from William), Davies (from Dafydd/David), Evans (from Evan/Ifan/John), Roberts, Thomas, Lewis, Hughes, Morgan, and Griffiths round out the most common Welsh surnames. The dominance of these biblical and saint-derived surnames reflects the period of surname adoption coinciding with the Christianisation of Welsh naming practices. Many Welsh families with these surnames can trace them back to a common Welsh ancestor bearing a popular saint's name.

The Welsh Language Revival

The resurgence of Welsh given names mirrors the broader Welsh language revival. Since the 1993 Welsh Language Act and the establishment of the National Assembly for Wales in 1999, Welsh-language education has expanded dramatically. Parents who might previously have chosen English names for their children increasingly select Welsh-language names as expressions of cultural identity. Names like Seren, Elin, Osian, Gethin, Iwan, Cadi, Celyn, and Efa have all grown in popularity in recent decades, particularly in Welsh-speaking communities in northwest and southwest Wales.

How to Use Welsh Names

  • Create authentic Welsh characters for contemporary fiction, literary novels, or stories set in Wales
  • Name characters for Welsh mythology-inspired fantasy drawing on the Mabinogion or Arthurian tradition
  • Build NPCs for games or interactive media set in Wales or the broader Celtic world
  • Generate names for characters in Eisteddfod, Welsh rugby, or Welsh cultural settings
  • Create authentic Welsh identities for genealogical research or heritage projects
  • Develop characters for historical fiction set in medieval Wales, the Tudor period, or the industrial Welsh valleys

The Character of Welsh Names

Rhiannon

Rhiannon — the divine queen of the Welsh Mabinogion, a figure associated with horses, birds, and otherworldly power — is one of the most beloved Welsh names internationally, familiar to millions through Fleetwood Mac's 1976 song. The name derives from a Celtic word meaning "divine queen" or "great queen." Other mythological Welsh female names include Branwen (white/blessed raven, from the Second Branch of the Mabinogion), Arianrhod (silver wheel), Blodeuwedd (flower-face, created from flowers by Math), and Nimue (the Lady of the Lake from Welsh Arthurian tradition).

Dafydd

Dafydd — the Welsh form of David — is one of Wales's most culturally important names, associated with Saint David (Dewi Sant), the patron saint of Wales, whose feast day on 1 March is celebrated as the national day. Dafydd ap Gwilym (c. 1315–1370) is considered the greatest Welsh poet, establishing Dafydd as both a religious and literary name of the first importance. The name has given rise to the common Welsh surnames Davies and Davis through the patronymic tradition. Modern Welsh forms include Daf (short form) and the Anglicised David used by many Welsh people.

Seren

Seren (star) has become one of the most popular Welsh female names in the 21st century — a genuinely Welsh word-name with a beautiful meaning. It exemplifies the trend toward meaningful Welsh word-names for girls, alongside Carys (love), Cerys (love), Nia (brightness), Enfys (rainbow), Glesni (blueness/purity), and Nefyn (heaven). These names reflect the Welsh language's richness as a source of beautiful word-meanings and the growing pride in Welsh identity that has made distinctively Welsh names fashionable throughout Wales and among the Welsh diaspora worldwide.

Example Welsh Names

Dafydd Jones Rhiannon Williams Emrys Davies Seren Evans Rhodri Hughes Angharad Roberts Gruffydd Morgan Carys Thomas Owain Lewis Ffion Griffiths

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this generator accessible via API? +
Yes — FunGenerators provides API access for programmatic generation of Welsh names, suitable for applications, games, and other automated use cases. Visit the API documentation on this site for authentication details and usage parameters.
Why are Jones, Williams, and Davies so common in Wales? +
These surnames dominate in Wales because of how Welsh people adopted hereditary surnames. Wales used a patronymic system (ap/ab for sons, ferch/verch for daughters) until the 16th–18th centuries. When hereditary surnames were adopted, most Welsh families took a fixed form of a recent ancestor's given name. Since the most popular male names were biblical saints' names — Ieuan/Evan (John), Wiliam (William), Dafydd (David), Gruffudd — their patronymic forms became the dominant surnames: ap Ieuan → Evans, ap William → Williams, ap Dafydd → Davies/Davis, ap Robert → Roberts. Jones comes from ap John, with the "p" being absorbed.
Can I use Welsh names for fantasy worldbuilding? +
Welsh names are excellent for fantasy worldbuilding, particularly for settings drawing on Celtic mythology, Arthurian tradition, or cultures analogous to medieval Wales. Tolkien used Welsh phonology extensively for Sindarin Elvish — names like Celebrían, Galadriel, and Lúthien have clear Welsh sound influences. The Welsh language's distinctive sounds (ll, ff, ch, rh) create an otherworldly quality perfect for elven or fey cultures. Welsh mythological names from the Mabinogion (Rhiannon, Arawn, Ceridwen, Math, Branwen, Blodeuwedd) provide ready-made mythologically resonant character names for any Celtic fantasy setting.
Are Welsh names used outside Wales? +
Several Welsh names have achieved international usage, particularly through mythology, literature, and cultural exports. Rhiannon became known worldwide through Fleetwood Mac's 1976 song. Dylan (from Welsh meaning "son of the sea") became globally popular partly through the poet Dylan Thomas. Gwendolyn/Gwendolen has long been used in English-language naming. Meredith, Morgan, and Evan are used widely in English-speaking countries without always being recognised as Welsh. The Welsh Arthurian names Owain and Bors appear in Arthurian literature worldwide. Recently, names like Carys and Cerys have begun appearing in non-Welsh families.
What is the significance of Welsh names in Arthurian legend? +
Welsh naming tradition is inseparable from Arthurian legend — the earliest Arthurian stories are Welsh, preserved in the Mabinogion and related medieval Welsh texts. Names from this tradition include Owain (or Ywain, son of Urien, a knight of the Round Table), Peredur (the Welsh Percival), Cei (Kay), Bedwyr (Bedivere), Cai, Rhiannon (the otherworldly queen of the First Branch), Branwen (the tragic princess of the Second Branch), Pryderi, and Arawn (King of the Otherworld). Emrys Wledig is the Welsh form of Ambrosius Aurelianus, associated with Merlin. These names carry the weight of the earliest Arthurian tradition and are still used in Wales today.
What makes a name distinctly Welsh? +
Distinctly Welsh names are characterised by their Celtic linguistic origins, their use of Welsh-language sounds and spellings, and their connection to Welsh mythology, history, and nature. Features include the ff sound (Ffion), the Welsh ll (Llewelyn, though this is also used in English contexts), double-d (Dafydd), the wyn/wen ending (Gwyn, Bronwen), and distinctively Welsh sounds like the -yn ending for males (Gwyn, Emryn) and the -en ending for females (Elen, Seren, Branwen). Names like Carys, Cerys, Seren, Nia, Ffion, Angharad, Rhiannon, Rhodri, Osian, and Emrys have no common equivalents outside Welsh and are immediately recognisable as Welsh.