Ranulf

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Ranulf was a masculine given name in Old French and Old Occitan, and is a masculine given name in the English language. Ranulf was introduced into England by the Norman conquest or alternatively is said to have been introduced to Scotland and northern England, by Scandinavian settlers in Early Middle Ages.<ref name="Hanks">Template:Citation (read online) [1]</ref> However, most earliest historical figures with this name originated on the continent. It is derived from the West Germanic name Raginulf, Raginolf.<ref name="NN"> Nordic Names : Raginolf (read online) [2]</ref> This West Germanic personal name is composed of two elements: the first, RAGN > ragin, means "advice", "decision" ;<ref name="NN"/> the second element, (w)ulf / (w)olf, means "wolf".<ref name="NN"/> or alternatively the Old Norse name Reginúlfr is based on the Old Norse variant forms reginn and úlfr.<ref name="Hanks"/> The Old Occitan anthroponym Ranulf (Ramnulf, Rannulf) does not contain exactly the same first element, but hram, short form of Gothic hrabns "raven".<ref>Marie-Thérèse Morlet, "Études d'anthroponymie occitane : les noms de personne de l’obituaire de Moissac (suite)" in Revue internationale d'onomastique, 1958, 10-1, p. 44 (read online) [3]</ref>

People with the name

Fictional characters with the name

  • Ranulf, character in Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance and its sequel, Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.
  • Ranulf, an additional natural son of Henry I of England in Sharon Kay Penman's Plantagenet series. The meticulous research for which Penman is noted extends to the names of minor characters. Completely fictional characters in her books are rare and are always identified in her author's notes. They serve as devices to illustrate aspects of medieval life, to reveal information, or to bridge gaps in knowledge, especially when such revelations would be out of character for the historical figures in her novels.<ref>Penman, Sharon Kay. "Ranulf vs Richard," 5 May 2009. Author's blog article accessed at <http://sharonkaypenman.com/blog/?p=48> 14 July 2013.</ref>

See also

References

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