Gertrude (given name)
Pronunciation | /ˈɡɜːrtruːd/ |
---|---|
Gender | Female |
Origin | |
Word/name | Germanic |
Meaning | derived from words meaning "spear" and "strength" |
Other names | |
Related names | Gertrud, Gjertrud, Gertraud, Geertruida, Geltrude, Gertrudis, Kerttu, Gertruda, Geirþrúður, Trude, Gerda, Kärt |
Gertrude (also spelled Gertrud) is a female given name which is derived from Germanic roots that meant "spear" and "strength". "Trudy", originally a diminutive of "Gertrude," has developed into a name in its own right.
In German-speaking countries, Gertraud (pronounced Ger-trowt) is a familiar variation of the name.
"Gartred" is a rare variation (attested in Daphne du Maurier's novel The King's General, set in 17th-century Cornwall, England).[1][2]
People[]
- Gertrude Abercrombie (1909–1977), American painter based in Chicago
- Gertrud Adelborg (1853–1942), Swedish suffragist
- Gertrud Ahlgren (1782–1874), Swedish folk healer
- Gertrude Alderfer (1931–2018), American professional baseball player
- Gertrude Ansell (1861-1932), British suffragette, animal rights activist and businesswoman
- Gertrude Appleyard (1865–1917), British archer
- Gertrude Aretz (1889–1838), German historian and publisher
- Lillian Gertrud Asplund (1906–2006), American last survivor of the sinking of the RMS Titanic
- Gertrude Astor (1887–1977), American motion-picture character actress
- Gertrude Atherton (1857–1948), American writer
- Gertrud Bacher (born 1971), retired Italian heptathlete
- Gertrude Bacon (1874-1948), aeronautical pioneer and writer with contributions in astronomy and botany
- Gertrud Baer (1890-1981), one of the founders of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
- Gertrude Bambrick (1897–1974), an American silent-film actress
- Gertrude Baniszewski (1929–1990), American murderer
- Gertrud Bäumer (1873–1954), German politician and feminist
- Gertrude Bell, (1868–1926), archaeologist and spy
- Gertrude Barrows Bennett (1883–1948), American writer of fantasy and science fiction
- Gertrude Berg (1894–1966), American actress and screenwriter
- Gertrude Bernard (1906–1986), Mohawk woman and companion of Grey Owl
- Gertrud Bing (1892–1964), German scholar and director of the Warburg Institute
- Gertrude Blanch (1897–1996), American mathematician
- Gertrude Bloede (1845–1905), American poet
- Gertrude Blom (1901–1993), Swiss journalist, social anthropologist and documentary photographer
- Gertrude Elizabeth Blood (1857–1911), Irish-born journalist, author, playwright, and editor
- Gertrude Bonnin (1876–1938), Sioux writer, editor, musician, teacher and political activist
- Gertrude Bryan (1888–1976), stage actress on Broadway
- Gertrude Caton–Thompson (1888–1985), English archaeologist
- Gertrude Chataway (1866–1951), child-friend of English author Lewis Carroll
- Gertrude Claire (1852–1928), American stage and silent-film actress
- Gertrude Colburn (1886–1968), American dancer and sculptor
- Gertrude Cosgrove (1882–1962), wife of Sir Robert Cosgrove, twice elected as Premier of Tasmania
- Gertrude Courtenay, Marchioness of Exeter (before 1504-1558), a lady at the court of Henry VIII of England
- Gertrude Mary Cox (1900–1978), American statistician
- Gertrude Crain (1911–1996), American publishing executive
- Gertrude Crampton (1909–1996), American children's writer and teacher
- Gertrude Denman, Baroness Denman, (1884–1954), British women's rights activist
- Gertrud Hedwig Anna Dohm (1855–1942), German actress
- Gertrude Walton Donahey (1908–2004), American politician
- Gertrud Dorka (1893–1976), German archaeologist, prehistorian and museum director
- Gertrude Dunn (1933–2004), American professional baseball player
- Gertrude Ederle (1905–2003), American competitive swimmer
- Gertrude B. Elion (1918–1999), American biochemist and pharmacologist
- Gertrude Elles (1872–1960), British geologist known for her work on graptolites
- Gertrude Falk (1925–2008), American physiologist
- Gertrude Franklin (1858-1913), American singer and music educator
- Gertrud Fridh (1921–1984), Swedish stage and film actress
- Gertrude Gabl (1948–1976), Austrian alpine skier
- Gertrude Scharff Goldhaber (1911-1998), German-born Jewish-American nuclear physicist
- Gertrude the Great (1256-c 1302), also known as Saint Gertrude of Helfta. German Benedictine nun, mystic, and theologian
- Gertrud Grunow (1870–1944), first woman teacher at the Bauhaus art school.
- Gertrude Healy (1894-1984), Australian violinist, educator
- Gertrude Himmelfarb (1922–2019), American historian
- Gertrude Jekyll (1843–1932), British horticulturist, garden designer, artist, and writer
- Gertraud Junge (1920–2002), Adolf Hitler's last private secretary
- Gertrude Kleinová (1918-1976), Czech three-time table tennis world champion
- Gertrud Koch (1924–2016), German resistance fighter
- Gertrud Kolmar (1894–1943), German lyric poet and writer
- Gertrud Kraus (1901-1977), Israeli pioneer of modern dance
- Gertrude Kuh (1893–1977), American landscape architect
- Gertrude Lawrence (1898–1952), Gertrude Alexandra Dagmar Lawrence Klasen. English actress, singer, dancer and performer
- Gertrude Rachel Levy (1884–1966), author and cultural historian
- Gertrud Luckner (1900–1995), German Christian resister against Nazism
- Gertrud Månsson (1866–1935), Swedish politician, the first woman in the Stockholm city council
- Gertrud Elisabeth Mara (1749–1833), German operatic soprano
- Frances Gertrude McGill (1882–1959), pioneering Canadian forensic pathologist and criminologist
- Sarah Gertrude Millin (1889–1968), South African author
- Gertrude Mongella (born 1945), Tanzanian politician
- Gertrude Morgan (1900–1980), African-American artist, musician, poet and preacher
- Gertrude Comfort Morrow (ca. 1888-1983), American architect
- Gertrude Neumark (1927–2010), American physicist
- Gertrude of Nivelles (c. 628-659), seventh-century abbess. Co-founder of the Abbey of Nivelles located in present-day Belgium
- Gertrud Otto (1895–1970) German art historian
- Gertrude Clare Owens, (1887–1963), Superior General of the Sisters of Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana
- Gertrud Pätsch (1910–1994), German ethnologist and philologist
- Gertrud Pålson-Wettergren (1897–1991), Swedish mezzo-soprano
- Gertrude Penhall (1846-1929), American civic leader and clubwoman
- Gertrude Pridgett Rainey (1882–1939), better known as Ma Rainey, blues singer
- Gertrud von Puttkamer (1881–1944), German erotic writer
- Gertrud Rask (1673–1735), first wife of the Danish-Norwegian missionary to Greenland, Hans Egede
- Gertrud Rittmann (1908–2005), German composer and music arranger in the United States
- Gertrude Sawyer (1895–1996), American architect
- Gertrud Schoenberg (1898–1967), second wife of Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg
- Gertrud Scholtz-Klink (1902–1999), fervent Nazi Party (NSDAP) member in Nazi Germany
- Gertrud Schüpbach Swiss-American molecular biologist
- Gertrud Seidmann (1919–2013), Austrian-British linguist and jewelry historian
- Gertrud Skomagers (died 1556), Danish alleged witch
- Gertrúd Stefanek (born 1959), Hungarian Olympic fencer
- Gertrude Stein (1874–1946), American novelist, poet, playwright, and art collector
- Gertrude Story (1929–2014), Canadian writer and radio broadcaster
- Gertrude Strohm (1843-1927), American author, compiler, game designer
- Gertrud Szabolcsi (1923–1993), Hungarian biochemist
- Gertrude Townend, British nurse and suffragette
- Gertrude Vachon (1962–2010), better known as Luna Vachon, American professional wrestler
- Gertrude Chandler Warner (1890–1979), American children's author
- Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–1942), American sculptor, art patron and collector
- Gertrude Weil (1879–1971), American activist in women's suffrage, labor reform, and civil rights
- Gertrud Wolle (1891–1952), German film actress
Fictional characters[]
- Gertrud Barkhorn, from the anime/manga series Strike Witches
- Gertrude Gadwall, a member of Disney's Duck family
- Gertrude, from William Shakespeare's play Hamlet, is Hamlet's mother and Queen of Denmark
See also[]
- Gertrude (disambiguation), for a list of fictional characters and people known by only one name
- Gertrudis
- Geertruida
References[]
- ^ "Reviews: The King's General". dumaurier.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23.
- ^ "The King's General". MacKay House.
Categories:
- Given names
- German feminine given names
- English feminine given names