Torquil is an Anglicised form of the Norwegian and Swedish masculine name Torkel, and the Scottish Gaelic name Torcall. The Scottish Gaelic name Torcall is a Gaelicised form of the Old Norse name Þorkell. The Scandinavian Torkel is a contracted form of the Old Norse Þorkell, made up of the two elements: Þór, meaning "Thor" the Norse god of thunder; and kell (in some variants ketill), meaning "(sacrificial) cauldron".[1]
Gender | Masculine |
---|---|
Language(s) | English |
Origin | |
Language(s) | 1. Scottish Gaelic, from Old Norse 2. Norwegian, Swedish, from Old Norse |
Word/name | 1. SG Torcall, from ON Þorketill 2. Nr, Sw Torkel, from ON Þorketill |
Derivation | ON Þorr + ketill |
Meaning | "Thor" + "(sacrificial) cauldron" |
Other names | |
Cognate(s) | 2. Thorkel; Torkil; Torkild; Torkjell |
A variant spelling of the Scottish Gaelic Torcall is Torcull. A similar Scottish Gaelic given name is Torcadall, which is also Anglicised as Torquil.[2]
Torquil
edit- Torquil (priest), Archdeacon of Dublin in 1180
- Torquil Campbell (born 1972), co-lead singer and songwriter of the Canadian band Stars
- Torquil MacLeod, 14th century Scottish clan chief
- Torquil MacLeod (clan chief), 16th-century Scottish clan chief
- Torquil MacNeill, 16th century Scottish clan chief
- Torquil Neilson, Australian actor
- Torquil Norman (born 1933), English businessman
- Torquil Riley-Smith (born 1962), founder of LBH, Britain's first gay radio station
Torquhil
edit- Torquhil Campbell, 13th Duke of Argyll (born 1968), Scottish peer
- Torquhil Matheson (1871–1963), senior British Army officer of the First World War
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Hanks, Patrick; Hardcastle, Kate; Hodges, Flavia (2006), A Dictionary of First Names, Oxford Paperback Reference (2nd ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 263, 397, 410, ISBN 978-0-19-861060-1
- ^ MacFarlane, Malcolm (1912), The School Gaelic Dictionary prepared for the use of learners of the Gaelic language, Stirling: Eneas Mackay, p. 148