Re: Ségolène
in reply to a message by Caprice
I found the following explanation on this French names site:
http://www.tous-les-prenoms.com/prenoms/filles/segolene.html
and translated it into English through Google and got this:
Resulting from Germanic the sieg, victory, follow-up of the adjective lind, soft, soft. This first name made a discrete career with the Middle Ages, then had disappeared from the repertory, except in some areas of the west and the south-west of France. It re-appeared in the years 1950. Sainte Ségolène was in VIIe century, the abbess of a monastery close to Lagrave, in the Tarn. She devoted her life to the leprous one.
I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the site, but the above explanation seems plausible. Sieglinde is a well-known name in Germany.
http://www.tous-les-prenoms.com/prenoms/filles/segolene.html
and translated it into English through Google and got this:
Resulting from Germanic the sieg, victory, follow-up of the adjective lind, soft, soft. This first name made a discrete career with the Middle Ages, then had disappeared from the repertory, except in some areas of the west and the south-west of France. It re-appeared in the years 1950. Sainte Ségolène was in VIIe century, the abbess of a monastery close to Lagrave, in the Tarn. She devoted her life to the leprous one.
I cannot vouch for the accuracy of the site, but the above explanation seems plausible. Sieglinde is a well-known name in Germany.
Replies
I would second that.
Also other people on this forum voted for Sieglinde, in this earlier thread:
http://www.behindthename.com/bb/arcview.php?id=495560&board=gen
Rene www.AboutNames.ch
Also other people on this forum voted for Sieglinde, in this earlier thread:
http://www.behindthename.com/bb/arcview.php?id=495560&board=gen
Rene www.AboutNames.ch