Ehrengard?
The widow of a very old German army officer whose obituary appeared in the Telegraph. No entry in this database, but there must be someone with knowledge or a sound opinion.
He was Generalmajor Heinz-Helmut von Hinckeldey, for the records.
He was Generalmajor Heinz-Helmut von Hinckeldey, for the records.
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The "Duden" for German given names sees Ehrengard as a probably quite recently coined name (i.e. compared to other such Germanic two-element names which sometimes are 1000 years old), with the elements 'Ehre' (a German word meaning 'honor') and the once-popular name ending 'gard' (etymologically related to English 'garden').
Thanks! That's really interesting. I'd assumed that it was probably medieval ... what does "quite recent" mean, do you know? 20th century, or 19th-century Romanticism (like all those little Victorian Ediths)?
Well, that database does not mention a date for Ehrengard.
However, for the male name Ehrenreich which contains the same first element it gives the 17th/18th century as time of origin.
However, for the male name Ehrenreich which contains the same first element it gives the 17th/18th century as time of origin.