Niamh

Niamh (Irish pronunciation: [n̠ʲiəvˠ], from Old Irish Niaṁ) is an Irish feminine given name (meaning "bright" or "radiant"),[1] anglicised as Neve, Nieve, Neave or Neeve .[2]

Niamh
Pronunciation[nʲɪəw]
English: /ˈnv/
Genderfeminine
Language(s)Irish
Origin
Word/nameIreland
Meaningbright, radiant
Region of originIreland
Popularitysee popular names

In Irish mythology, Niamh is the daughter of the god of the sea, Manannán mac Lir and one of the queens of Tír na nÓg, the land of eternal youth. She was the lover of the poet-hero Oisín. The first recorded use of Niamh (that spelling) as a given name in modern Ireland was in 1911, when two children were registered with the name and when a Niamh was listed in that year's census.[3][4][5]

Neve is also a Dutch and Flemish surname. The given name of Canadian actress Neve Campbell is derived from the Dutch surname, her mother's maiden name.

People with the given name

Niamh

Neve, Neave or Nieve

Fictional characters

  • Niamh Cassidy in the soap opera Fair City
  • Niamh, wife of Slaine Mac Roth in the 2000 AD comic series Sláine
  • Niamh Quigley in the BBC Television programme Ballykissangel
  • Niamh O’Connor (character), minor character in the soap opera Emmerdale
  • Niamh in the book Son of the Shadows by Juliet Marillier
  • Niamh Cranitch in the BBC legal drama, Silk
  • Niamh Connolly in Channel 4 TV series Father Ted
  • Niamh Brodie, deceased sister of Jackson Brodie in the book Case Histories by Kate Atkinson
  • Niamh Fairbrother in the book The Casual Vacancy by JK Rowling
  • Ebba/Niamh Rose, known as Rose, main character in the book East by Edith Pattou
  • Niamh in the ABC2 show Please Like Me
  • Niamh in the movie Dark Touch
  • Niamh Reid in the TV3 series Red Rock
  • Niamh Donoghue in the BBC 1 series Doctors

Other uses of the name

See also

References

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