Baby names from the TV show "Vikings"

Want a perfect viking name for your baby? Well, then this list is perfect for you!
  1. Alfred
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "wise counselor; elf counsel"
    • Description:

      Alfred is up off his recliner! If you're looking for a path to Fred, you can go directly to Frederick or take the long way around with the so-out-it's-in-again Alfred. Alfred is quite popular in several European countries, especially England and Wales, Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.
  2. Astrid
    • Origin:

      Scandinavian
    • Meaning:

      "divinely beautiful"
    • Description:

      Astrid has been a Scandinavian royal name since the tenth century, and many people associated it with the Swedish author of the Pippi Longstocking stories, Astrid Lindgren. Astrid is derived from the name Ástríðr, which is made up of the Old Norse elements that mean "god" and "beautiful."
  3. Aslaug
    • Athelstan
      • Bjørn
        • Ecbert
          • Floki
            • Gisla
              • Gyda
                • Helga
                  • Origin:

                    Scandinavian
                  • Meaning:

                    "holy, blessed"
                  • Description:

                    A traditional Nordic name, Helga was extremely popular throughout Scandinavia in the 19th and early 20th centuries. In Germany, it was a Top 10 pick from 1924 to 1943. And it still ranks in the Icelandic Top 50 today.
                • Horik
                  • Hvitserk
                    • Ivar
                      • Origin:

                        Norse
                      • Meaning:

                        "yew wood, archer"
                      • Description:

                        Part of a small group of similar names with similar roots — Ivor, Iver, Ivo, Ives — which are all worth looking at. Used throughout Scandinavia, Ivar is currently a Top 100 name in Sweden. In the Willa Cather novel O Pioneers!, there is a character known as —oops —Crazy Ivar.
                    • Judith
                      • Origin:

                        Hebrew
                      • Meaning:

                        "woman from Judea"
                      • Description:

                        The biblical Judith, the fourth most popular name in 1940, may be getting ready for a comeback in its full, elegant, if somewhat solemn form. Many of those earlier Judiths were called Judy—some after Judy (born Frances) Garland—preferring it over their more formal proper name. Today, Judith, like Deborah, may have shaken off just enough to appeal to parents looking for a traditional, yet under-the-radar biblical name. And Jude would be a likelier nickname these days than the Judge Judy connection.
                    • Lagertha
                      • Magnus
                        • Origin:

                          Scandinavian from Latin
                        • Meaning:

                          "greatest"
                        • Description:

                          Magnus is a Latin name, literally meaning "greatest," that has a Scandinavian feel. It dates back to Charlemagne being called Carolus Magnus, or Charles the Great. Norwegian king Magnus I, named after Charlemagne, introduced it to his culture, and thus Magnus was the name of six early kings of Norway and four of Sweden. It is still a highly popular name in Denmark and Norway.
                      • Ragnar
                        • Origin:

                          Norse
                        • Meaning:

                          "warrior or judgment"
                        • Description:

                          An fearsome old Norse name with a long history in Scandinavia. It's gotten a boost in the States from popularity of the History Channel drama "Vikings," in which the protagonist is named Ragnar. Ragnar Lodbrok (meaning "shaggy pants") was a legendary warrior whose story was told in the Viking sagas. Ragnar also recalls name of the Norse Judgment Day, Ragnarök.
                      • Rollo
                        • Origin:

                          Latin form of Rolf
                        • Meaning:

                          "wolf"
                        • Description:

                          Rollo is a livelier, roly-poly, o-ending version of Roland.
                      • Sigurd
                        • Siggy