I love the heritage of all the names you reference; and how easily
Amaryllis &
Briseis would easily work for males as well - and even
Gwendolen even if the name is so commonly attributed to females.
AmaryllisBriseisGwendolen
The place yaf a thousand savours swote,
And Bachus, god of wyn, sat hir besyde,
And
Ceres next, that doth of hunger bote;
And, as seide, amiddes lay Cipryde,
To whom on knees two yonge folkes cryde
To ben hir help; but thus I leet hir lye,
And ferther in the temple I gan espye
That, in dispyte of
Diane the chaste,
Ful many a bowe y-broke heng on the wal
Of maydens, suche as gunne hir tymes waste
In hir servyse; and peynted over al
Of many a story, of which I touche shal
A fewe, as of
Calixte and Athalaunte,
And many a mayde, of which the name I wante;
Semyramus,
Candace, and Ercules,
Biblis,
Dido, Thisbe, and Piramus,
Tristram, Isoude,
Paris, and
Achilles,
Eleyne, Cleopatre, and Troilus,
Silla, and eek the moder of
Romulus --
Alle these were peynted on that other syde,
And al hir love, and in what plyte they dyde.