Enid (given name)

Welsh pronunciation: [ˈɛnɨ̞d]) is a feminine given name. Its origin is Middle Welsh eneit, meaning 'spirit; life; purity' (from Proto-Celtic *ana-ti̯o-, compare Gaulish anatia 'souls (?)' attested on the Larzac tablet, ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European root *h₂enh₁- 'to breathe, blow'; compare the modern Welsh word anadl 'breath; wind').[1]

Enid was the Celtic goddess and Arthurian name of the 19th century following Alfred Lord Tennyson's Arthurian epic Idylls of the King (1859) and its medieval Welsh source, the Mabinogi tale of Geraint and Enid.[2]

Enid drifted into popular use in Britain in the 1890s, becoming most popular in the 1920s. Then it was the greatest possible compliment to be called a "second Enid", since the original was a legendary romantic figure of spotless perfection and courage in life. Enid was the quiet, brave, steadfast character of Tennyson's poem, loved deeply by many, yet her love or loyalty to her husband was unwavering, even at his worst.[3]

People

  • Enid Bagnold (1889–1981), British author and playwright
  • Enid Bakewell (born 1940), English cricketer
  • Enid Bennett (1893–1969), Australian-born American silent film actress
  • Enid Bishop (born 1925), Australian librarian
  • Enid Blyton (1897–1968), British children's writer
  • Enid Bosworth Lorimer (1887–1982), Australian actress and director
  • Enid Campbell (1932–2010), Australian legal scholar and law professor
  • Enid Charles (1894–1972), British socialist, feminist and statistician
  • Enid Crow (born 1968), American feminist artist
  • Enid Dame (1943–2003), American poet
  • Enid Derham (1882–1941), Australian poet and academic
  • Enid Evans (1914–2011), New Zealand librarian
  • Enid Gilchrist, Australian fashion designer
  • Enid Greene Mickelsen (born 1958), American politician
  • Enid Greene (born 1958), American politician
  • Enid Hattersley (1904–2001), British politician
  • Enid A. Haupt (1906–2005), American publisher and philanthropist
  • Enid Hibbard (1889–1960), American screenwriter
  • Enid Johnson Macleod (1909–2001), Canadian anaesthetist, medical doctor and academic
  • Enid Kent (born 1945), American former television actress
  • Enid Kent, played Nurse Bigelow, a recurring character in the television series M*A*S*H
  • Enid Lakeman (1903–1995), British political reformer, writer and politician
  • Enid Lapthorn (1889–1967), British politician
  • Enid Legros-Wise (born 1943), Canadian ceramic artist
  • Enid Luff (1935–2022), Welsh musician
  • Enid Lyons (1897–1981), Australian politician and wife of Prime Minister Joseph Lyons
  • Enid MacRobbie (born 1931), Scottish plant scientist
  • Enid Mark (1932–2008), American editor and publisher
  • Enid Markey (1894–1981), American actress
  • Enid Marx (1902–1998), English painter and designer
  • Enid Michael (1883–1966), American ranger-naturalist
  • Enid Morgan, Welsh former international lawn and indoor bowls competitor
  • Enid Mumford (1924–2006), British professor largely known for her work on human factors and socio-technical systems
  • Enid Nemy (born 1924), Canadian-born American reporter (The New York Times) and columnist
  • Enid Riddell (1903–1980), British socialite and racing driver
  • Enid Diana Elizabeth Rigg (1938–2020), known professionally as Dame Diana Rigg, British actress
  • Enid Shomer, American poet
  • Enid Stacy (1868–1903), English socialist activist
  • Enid Stamp Taylor (1904–1946), English actress
  • Enid Starkie (1897–1970), Irish literary critic
  • Enid Szánthó (1907–1997), Hungarian opera singer
  • Enid Tahirović (born 1972), Bosnian handball goalkeeper
  • Enid Tapsell (1903–1975), New Zealander nurse, community leader, writer and local politician
  • Enid Wyn Jones (1909–1967), Welsh nurse

Fictional characters

Places

  • Enid, city in Oklahoma
  • Enid Lake, lake in Mississippi
  • Enid Lake, small lake in Oregon on Mount Hood, popular with snowshoers

References

  1. ^ "Enid". Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper. Retrieved 1 January 2013.
  2. ^ Dunkling, Leslie; Gosling, William (1984) [1983]. The Facts on file dictionary of first names. New York: Facts on File Publications. ISBN 0871962748. OCLC 10533041.
  3. ^ "Geraint and Enid". Robbins Library Digital Projects. Retrieved 2018-09-04.
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