Browse Names

This is a list of names in which the gender is masculine; and the usage is Medieval French.
gender
usage
Aimery m Medieval French
Old French form of Aimeric.
Amé m Medieval French
Old French form of Aimé.
Amis m Medieval English, Medieval French
Medieval name, a masculine form of Amice. It appears in the medieval French poem Amis and Amiles, about two friends who make sacrifices for one another.
Auberi m Medieval French
Old French form of Aubrey.
Aymeri m Medieval French
Old French form of Aimeric. This is the name of a hero in medieval French romance, Aymeri de Narbonne.
Enguerran m Medieval French
Old French form of Engilram (see Ingram). This was the name of several medieval French nobles from Picardy.
Estienne m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Stephen.
Eudes m Medieval French
Old French form of Odo.
Garnier m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Werner.
Geoffroi m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Geoffrey.
Gidie m Medieval French
Medieval French form of Aegidius (see Giles).
Gosse m Medieval French
Old French form of Gozzo.
Guarin m Medieval French
Norman French form of Warin.
Guiscard m Medieval French
Norman French form of the Norman name Wischard, from Old Norse vizkr "wise" and the Old French pejorative suffix -ard (from Old Frankish hard "hard, firm, brave, hardy"). This was the byname of Robert Guiscard, an 11th-century Norman conqueror of Sicily.
Jehan m Medieval French
Old French form of Iohannes (see John).
Josse m French (Rare), Medieval French
French form of Iudocus (see Joyce).
Onfroi m Medieval French
Norman French form of Humphrey.
Piers m English (British), Medieval French
Medieval form of Peter. This is the name of the main character in the 14th-century poem Piers Plowman by William Langland.
Rollant m Medieval French, Carolingian Cycle
Old French form of Roland. This form is used in the oldest surviving text of La Chanson de Roland.
Roul m Medieval French, Medieval English
Norman French form of Rolf.
Vauquelin m Medieval French
Old French form of the Norman name Walchelin, derived from Old Frankish walh or Old High German walah meaning "foreigner, Celt, Roman" (Proto-Germanic *walhaz).