| Pronunciation | /ˈhɪldə/ HIL-də | 
|---|---|
| Gender | Female | 
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Hild | 
| Meaning | Battle | 
| Other names | |
| Related names | Hilde, Hildur | 
Hilda is one of several female given names derived from the name Hild, formed from Old Norse hildr, meaning 'battle'. Hild, a Nordic-German Bellona,[1] was a Valkyrie who conveyed fallen warriors to Valhalla. Warfare was often called Hild's Game.[2] The name became rare in England during the later Middle Ages, but was revived in the 19th century.[3] In Sweden it has been in use since the late 18th century, being a popular name throughout the 19th century. Hilde is a variant of Hilda. Another variation on Hild is Hildur.[4][5][6]
Hilda is the name of:
People
- Hilda of Whitby (c. 614-680), English saint
 - Princess Hilda of Nassau (1864–1952)
 - Hilda Bernard (1920–2022), Argentine stage, screen and television actress
 - Hilda Bernstein (1915–2006), author, artist, and anti-apartheid and women's rights activist
 - Hilda Borgström (1871–1954), Swedish actress
 - Hilda Bettermann (1942-2023), American politician
 - Hilda Braid (1929–2007), English actress
 - Hilda Mabel Canter (1922–2007), English mycologist, protozoologist, and photographer
 - Hilda Caselli (1836-1901), Swedish educational reformer
 - Hilda Clayton (1991-2013), American U.S. Army specialist and war photographer
 - Hilda Conkling (1910–1986), American poet
 - Hilda Dallas (1878–1958) and sister Irene Dallas (1883 -1971), British suffragettes
 - Hilda Eisen (1917–2017), a Polish-born American businessperson, philanthropist, and Holocaust survivor
 - Hilda Ellis Davidson (1914–2006), English antiquarian and academic
 - H. D. (1886–1961), born Hilda Doolittle, American poet, novelist and memoirist
 - Hilda de Duhalde (born 1946), Argentine politician
 - Hilda Fenemore (1914–2004), English actress
 - Hilda Gadea (1921-1974), Peruvian economist, communist leader, author, and Che Guevara's first wife
 - Hilda Gaxiola (born 1972), Mexican beach volleyball player
 - Hilda Geiringer (1893–1973), Austrian mathematician and professor
 - Hilda Goldblatt Gorenstein (Hilgos) (1905–1998), American oil painter and watercolorist
 - Hilda Habichayn (1934–2021), Argentine sociologist, created first master's program for women's studies in Latin America
 - Hilda Hewlett (1864–1943), first British woman aviator to earn a pilot's licence, and aviation entrepreneur
 - Hilda Heine (1951), Marshallese educator and politician
 - Hilda Hilst (1930–2004), Brazilian poet, playwright and novelist
 - Hilda Phoebe Hudson (1881-1965), English mathematician
 - Hilda Käkikoski (1864-1912), Finnish politician, writer and schoolteacher, one of the first nineteen women elected to parliament
 - Hilda Kibet (born 1981), Dutch long distance runner
 - Hilda Lovell-Smith (1886 - 1973), businesswoman and community organiser from New Zealand
 - Hilda Lund (1840–1911), Swedish ballerina
 - Hilda Molina (born 1942), chief neurosurgeon of Cuba and dissident
 - Hilda Mundy (1912-1980), Bolivian writer, poet, journalist
 - Hilda Rix Nicholas (1884-1961), Australian painter
 - Hilda Petrini (1838–1895), Swedish clock maker
 - Hilda Pinnix-Ragland, American business executive
 - H. F. M. Prescott (1896-1972), English author, academic and historian
 - Hilda Ramos (born 1964), Cuban discus thrower
 - Hilda Muhlhauser Richards, American federal labor official
 - Hilda Ross (1883-1959), New Zealand politician
 - Hilda Runciman, Viscountess Runciman of Doxford (1869–1956), British politician
 - Hilda Sachs (1857-1935), Swedish journalist and women's rights activist
 - Hilda Sandels (1830-1921), Swedish opera singer
 - Hilda Sjölin (1835–1915), Swedish photographer
 - Hilda Solis (born 1957), United States Secretary of Labor in the Obama administration
 - Hilda Crosby Standish (1902-2005), American birth control pioneer
 - Hilda Tadria, Ugandan women's rights activist
 - Hilda Terry (1914–2006), American cartoonist, creator of the comic strip Teena
 - Hilda Vīka (1897–1963), Latvian artist and writer
 
Fictional characters
- Hilda, title character in Luke Pearson's Hilda series
 - Hilda, the 36th hero in Mobile Legends: Bang Bang
 - Hilda, the female protagonist of the video game Pokémon Black and White
 - Hilda, a minor character on the family television series The Muppet Show
 - Hilda or Hildegarde (Beelzebub), a main character in the manga Beelzebub
 - Hilda, a pinup girl created by Duane Bryers
 - Hilda, the wife of Horace Rumpole, a character in the book and TV series Rumpole of the Bailey
 - Hilda Berg, an airplane boss who can shapeshift into a zeppelin from Cuphead
 - Dame Hilda Bracket, half of the opera singing female impersonation act "Hinge and Bracket"
 - Hilda Valentine Goneril, a character from the video game Fire Emblem: Three Houses
 - Princess Hilda of Lorule, a character from the video game The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds
 - Hilda Ogden, from the British soap opera Coronation Street
 - Hilda Spellman, a main character in Sabrina, the Teenage Witch
 - Hilda Suarez, from the American television series Ugly Betty
 - "Hot Ice" Hilda, a supporting character in the anime Outlaw Star
 - Polaris Hilda, the main antagonist of the Asgard arc in the anime Saint Seiya
 
Space
- 153 Hilda, a large asteroid in the Hilda group in the Solar System, named after one of the discoverer's daughters.
 
See also
- Brunhilda (disambiguation)
 - Hildebrand
 - Hildegard
 - Gunhild
 - Krimhild
 - Mathilde
 - St. Hilda's (disambiguation)
 - Broom-Hilda, U.S. newspaper comic strip created by Russell Myers
 - Hylda (disambiguation)
 - Ildikó
 
References
- ↑  Heinrich Wilhelm Schütz (1837). Kleines Namen-Lexikon oder kurzgefasste Erklärungen der merkwürdigsten Orts- und Personennamen: mit Einschluss nicht weiniger Länder-, Völker-, Gebirgs- und Flussnamen (in German). Feister. pp. 34–. 
Hild, nordisch-deutsche Bellona, dann auch Krieg überhaupt ...
 - ↑  Scandinavian Classics. Vol. 27. American Scandinavian Foundation. 1927. p. 303. 
Warfare and battle had numerous designations after the Valkyries; "Hild's Game" is especially common.
 - ↑  Patrick Hanks; Kate Hardcastle; Flavia Hodges (2006). A Dictionary of First Names. Oxford University Press. pp. 224–. ISBN 978-0-19-861060-1. 
The name all but died out by the 14th century. It was strongly revived in the 19th century. Since the 1930s, however, it has again fallen from favour.
 - ↑ Nancy L. Coleman; Olav Veka (9 December 2010). A Handbook of Scandinavian Names. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 10–. ISBN 978-0-299-24833-8.
 - ↑ Bengt af Klintberg (30 January 2014). Namnen i almanackan (in Swedish). Norstedts. pp. 35–. ISBN 978-91-7297-039-7.
 - ↑ Teresa Norman (1 July 2003). World of Baby Names, A (Revised). Penguin. pp. 498–. ISBN 978-1-4406-2556-5.
 
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