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Ethel (also ) is an word meaning "noble", today often used as a feminine .


Etymology and historic usage
The word means æthel "noble".

It is frequently attested as the first element in Anglo-Saxon names, both masculine and feminine, e.g. Æthelhard, Æthelred, Æthelwulf; Æthelburg, Æthelflæd, Æthelthryth (). It corresponds to the Adel- and Edel- in continental names, such as (Æthelwulf), Albert (Adalbert), Adelheid (Adelaide), Edeltraut and Edelgard.

Some of the feminine Anglo-Saxon names in Æthel- survived into the modern period (e.g. 1776–1845). Ethel was in origin used as a of such names, but it began to be used as a feminine given name in its own right beginning in the mid-19th century, gaining popularity due to characters so named in novels by W. M. Thackeray ( – 1855) and Charlotte Mary Yonge ( The Daisy Chain whose heroine Ethel's full name is Etheldred – 1856); the actress – born 1879 – was named after The Newcomes character.

Notes & Queries published correspondence about the name Ethel in 1872 because it was in fashion.Withycombe, E. G. (1945) The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names; 2nd ed. Oxford: Clarendon Press; p. 102

The feminine name's popularity peaked in the 1890s. In the United States, it was the 7th most commonly given name for baby girls in the year 1894. Its use gradually declined during the 20th century, falling below rank 100 by 1940, and below rank 1000 in 1976.

Ethel was also occasionally used as a masculine given name during the 1880s to 1910s, but never with any frequency (never rising above rank 400, or 0.02% in popularity).statistics cited after behindthename.com


People
  • Aethel Tollemache (c. 1875–1955), British suffragette
  • (born 1940), Uruguayan composer, poet, guitarist, and singer-songwriter
  • Ethel D. Allen (1929–1981), the first African-American woman to serve on Philadelphia City Council
  • (1883–1958), Australian poet, essayist, novelist and painter
  • Ethel Percy Andrus (1884–1967), educator and founder of AARP
  • (1876–1945), American journalist and historian
  • (1873–1957), British archer and 1908 Olympic competitor
  • (1934–2018), American stage and film actress
  • (1934–1984), American jazz and popular singer
  • (1879–1959), American stage and screen actress
  • (1861–1931), English doctor, politician and suffragette
  • Ethel Blondin-Andrew (born 1951), Canadian politician and parliamentarian
  • (born 1976), Filipino comedian, TV personality, singer and author
  • , American attorney and politician
  • (born 1998), American singer-songwriter
  • (born 1909), British supercentenarian
  • (1908–1987), Canadian high jump gold medalist in the 1928 Olympics
  • Ethel Clay Price (1874–1943), American nurse and socialite
  • (1882–1966), American silent-film actress
  • (born 1888), British
  • (1866–1929), American impressionist painter
  • Ethel Harriet Comyns-Lewer (1861–1946), British ornithologist and periodical editor, publisher and owner
  • (1882–1920), American stage actress and singer
  • Ethel McGhee Davis (1899–1990), American educator, social worker, and college administrator
  • Ethel Roosevelt Derby (1891–1977), younger daughter of U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt
  • Ethel de Fraine (1879–1918), British botanist
  • , American expert in the risks of radiation-induced cancer
  • Ethel Hillyer Harris (1859-1931), American author
  • (1869–1975), British muse of Lewis Carroll
  • (1892–1989), American cartoonist and illustrator
  • Ethel Haythornthwaite (1894–1986), English environmental campaigner and a pioneer of countryside protection
  • E. Ann Hoefly (1919–2003), American brigadier general
  • Ethel Johnson (athlete) (1908–1964), English sprinter
  • Ethel Johnson (wrestler) (1935–2018), American professional wrestler
  • (1928–2024), American widow of Robert F. Kennedy
  • Ethel Lang (actress) (1902–1995), Australian actress
  • Ethel Lang (supercentenarian) (1900–2015), British supercentenarian and the last Victorian
  • (1850 or 1851–1936), British politician
  • (1920–2024), British World War II nurse and yoga instructor
  • (1909–1960), Scottish anarchist, activist and propagandist
  • (1908–1984), American actress and singer
  • Ethel Isabel Moody (1905–1941), American mathematician
  • (1872–1920), American civic, education, and national defense work leader
  • Ethel Rogers Mulvany (1904–1992), Canadian social worker and educator
  • Ethel L. Payne (1911–1991), African-American journalist
  • Ethel Rosenberg (1915–1953), American executed for espionage
  • Ethel Schwabacher (1903–1984), American abstract expressionist painter
  • (1898–1951), American silent-film actress
  • Ethel Smith (organist) (1902–1996), American organist and recording artist
  • (1858–1944), English composer and women's-suffrage leader
  • (1894–1959), American silent-film actress
  • Ethel Grey Terry (1882–1931), American silent-film actress
  • Ethel L. M. Thorpe (1908–2001), British-Canadian nurse
  • (1872–1958), Australian novelist and children's writer
  • Ethel Lilian Voynich (1864–1960), English novelist and musician


Fictional characters
  • Ethel Ambrewster, a character in the sitcom
  • Ethel Beavers, a character in the sitcom Parks and Recreation
  • Ethel Blackmore, a character in the webcomic
  • Ethel Hallow, a character in The Worst Witch book series by Jill Murphy
  • Ethel Janowski, a character in the film Criminally Insane
  • , a character in the television program I Love Lucy
  • Ethel Mertz, a character from The Howard Stern Show
  • , a character in the British soap opera
  • Ethel Sprocket, a character in the Canadian animated sitcom
  • Ethel Rogers, a character in Agatha Christie’s novel And Then There Were None
  • Ethel Thayer, a character in the play On Golden Pond
  • Big Ethel, a character in
  • Silvercoat Ethel, a character in Xenoblade Chronicles 3
  • Auntie Ethel, a character in Baldur's Gate 3


See also
  • Ætheling
  • Odal (rune)
  • Odal (disambiguation)
  • Eth of The Glums on Take It From Here
  • , a surname
  • Ethelbari, a village in West Bengal, India

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