Hilde (given name)
Hilde | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | HIL-deh |
Gender | Female |
Origin | |
Word/name | Hild |
Meaning | Battle |
Other names | |
Related names | Hilda, Hildur |
Look up Hilde in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Hilde is one of several female given names derived from the name Hild formed from Old Norse hildr, meaning "battle". Hild, a Nordic-German Bellona,[1] was a Valkyrie who conveyed fallen warriors to Valhalla. Warfare was often called Hild's Game.[2] Hilde was popular in Norway from the 1950s until the 1970s. It is a variant of Hilda, which in turn is a more recent variation of Hildur.[3][4][5]
- Hilde Benjamin (1902–1989), East German judge who presided over political show trials
- Hilde Bergebakken (born 1963), Norwegian Socialist Left Party politician
- Hilde De Baerdemaeker (born 1978), Flemish actress
- Hilde Bruch (1904–1984)
- Hilde Coppi (1909–1943), German resistance fighter
- Hilde Crevits (born 1967)
- Hilde Domin (1909–2006), German lyric poet and writer
- Hilde Gerg (born 1975), German former alpine skier
- Hilde Gueden (1917–1988)
- Hilde Hagerup (born 1976), Norwegian novelist and children author
- Hilde Haugsgjerd (born 1952), Norwegian newspaper editor
- Hilde Heynen, professor of architectural theory at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
- Hilde Hildebrand (1897–1976), German actress
- Hilde Himmelweit (1918–1989), German social psychologist
- Hilde Holger (1905–2001)
- Hilde Holovsky (died 1933), Austrian figure skater
- Hilde Houben-Bertrand (born 1940), Belgian Flemish Christian Party: CD&V politician and former governor Limburg, Belgian
- Hilde Hovdenak (born 1971)
- Hilde Hummelvoll (born 1960), Norwegian television personality
- Hilde Indreberg (born 1957), Norwegian judge
- Hilde Frafjord Johnson (born 1963), Norwegian Christian Democratic Party politician
- Hilde Konetzni (1905–1980), Austrian operatic soprano
- Hilde Körber (1906–1969), German film actress
- Hilde Krahl (1917–1999), Austrian film actress
- Hilde Lauer (born 1943), Romanian Olympic sprint canoer
- Hilde Lindemann
- Hilde Magnusson Lydvo (born 1970)
- Hilde Lyrån (born 1963), Norwegian actress, dancer, and comedian
- Hilde Kate Lysiak (born 2007-2008), American Multi-media journalist, publisher, editor
- Hilde Mangold (1898–1924)
- Hilde Marstrander (born 1969), Norwegian fashion journalist and illustrator
- Hilde Meisel (1914–1945)
- Hilde Gjermundshaug Pedersen (born 1964)
- Hilde Quintens (born 1964), Belgian cyclist
- Hilde Riis (born 1959), Norwegian Olympic cross-country skier
- Hilde Sandvik (born 1970), Norwegian journalist
- Hilde Schrader (1910–1966), German Olympic swimmer
- Hilde Schramm (born 1936)
- Hilde Sherman (1923-2011), German Holocaust survivor and memoirist.
- Hilde Singsaas (born 1972), Norwegian Labour Party politician
- Hilde Krahwinkel Sperling (1908–1981), German tennis player
- Hilde Strømsvold (born 1967), Norwegian football goalkeeper
- Hilde Synnøve Lid (born 1971), Norwegian Olympic freestyle skier
- Hilde Teerlinck (born 1966)
- Hilde Tellesbø (born 1963), Norwegian orienteering competitor
- Hilde Urbaniak
- Hilde Vogt (born 1945)
- Hilde Henriksen Waage (born 1959), Norwegian historian
- Hilde Weissner (1909–1987), German actress
- Hilde Zach (1942–2011), mayor of Innsbruck, Austria
- Hilde Zadek (born 1917), German operatic soprano
- Hilde Zaloscer (1903–1999)
- Hilde Ziegler (1939–1999), German actress
- Hilde Zimmermann (1920–2002), Austrian resistance fighter against Nazism and survivor of the KZ Ravensbrück
- Hilde Østbø (born 1974), Norwegian Olympic handball player
See also
- Hilde (disambiguation)
- Hildegard, a female name derived from Old High German hild and gard
- Hildegarde (disambiguation)
References
- ↑ Heinrich Wilhelm Schütz (1837). Kleines Namen-Lexikon oder kurzgefasste Erklärungen der merkwürdigsten Orts- und Personennamen: mit Einschluss nicht weiniger Länder-, Völker-, Gebirgs- und Flussnamen (in German). Feister. pp. 34–.
Hild, nordisch-deutsche Bellona, dann auch Krieg überhaupt ...
- ↑ Scandinavian Classics 27. American Scandinavian Foundation. 1927. p. 303.
Warfare and battle had numerous designations after the Valkyries; "Hild's Game" is especially common.
- ↑ Nancy L. Coleman; Olav Veka (9 December 2010). A Handbook of Scandinavian Names. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 10–. ISBN 978-0-299-24833-8.
- ↑ Bengt af Klintberg (30 January 2014). Namnen i almanackan (in Swedish). Norstedts. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-91-7297-039-7.
- ↑ Teresa Norman (1 July 2003). World of Baby Names, A (Revised). Penguin. pp. 498–. ISBN 978-1-4406-2556-5.
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