Maud (given name)
Maud or Maude (approximately pronounced /mɔːd/ in English), is an Old German name meaning "powerful battler". It is a variant of the given name Matilda but is uncommon as a surname. The Welsh variant of this name is Mawd.[1]
The name's popularity in 19th-century England is associated with Alfred Tennyson's poem Maud.[2][3]
People with the name include
Royalty and nobility
- Maud, Countess of Huntingdon (c. 1074–1130), Queen of Alba as the wife of King David I of Scotland
 - Maud, 2nd Countess of Huntingdon (1074–1130), daughter of Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria and heir to his earldom of Huntingdon
 - Empress Matilda, (1102–1169), also known as "Mahaut", "Maud" or "Maude", daughter of King Henry I of England and mother to King Henry II of England
 - Maud Angelica Behn (born 2003), member of the Norwegian royal family
 - Maud Carnegie, Countess of Southesk (1893–1945), née Lady Maud Duff, titled Princess Maud from 1905 to 1923, a member of the British Royal Family
 - Maud de Badlesmere (1310–1366), English noblewoman and Countess of Oxford
 - Maud de Clare (1276–1327), Baroness de Clifford and Baroness de Welles by marriage
 - Maud de Lacy (1230–1304), Baroness Geneville
 - Maud de Lacy (1223–1289), Countess of Gloucester
 - Maud de Prendergast (c. 1242 – 1273), Norman-Irish noblewoman and Lady of Offaly
 - Maud Francis (c. 1370 – 1424), English noblewoman and Countess of Salisbury
 - Maud Green, Lady Parr (c. 1490/92 – 1531), English noblewoman and the mother of Katherine Parr, the sixth and final wife of King Henry VIII
 - Maud Herbert, the eldest daughter of William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, who intended to marry her to Henry, Earl of Richmond, the later Henry VII
 - Maud le Vavasour (1176–1225), Irish noblewoman and Baroness Butler
 - Maud of Apulia (c. 1060 – 1112), Countess of Barcelona
 - Matilda of Flanders, (c. 1031 – 1083), also known as "Maud", Queen of England and Duchess of Normandy by marriage to William the Conqueror
 - Maud of Gloucester (died 1189), Countess of Chester
 - Maud of Lancaster (c. 1310 – 1377), Countess of Ulster
 - Maud of Normandy (died 1006)
 - Maud of Savoy (1125–1158), first Queen Consort of Portugal
 - Maud of Wales (1869–1938), also known as Maud, Queen of Norway, a member of the British Royal Family
 - Maud Palmer, Countess of Selborne (1858–1950), wife of William Palmer, 2nd Earl of Selborne and suffragist
 - Maud Parr, Lady Lane (c. 1507 – 1558), English courtier and gentlewoman to Queen Katherine Parr, her cousin
 - Maud Petty-Fitzmaurice, Marchioness of Lansdowne (1850–1932), British aristocrat and Vicereine of India
 
Arts
- Maud Adams (born 1945), Swedish actress
 - Maud Aiken (1898–1978), Irish musician and director of the Municipal School of Music in Dublin
 - Maud Allan (1873–1956), Canadian dancer and choreographer
 - Maude Apatow (born 1997), American actress
 - Maud Tindal Atkinson (1875–1954), British painter
 - Maud Boyd (1867–1929), British actress and singer
 - Maud Cressall (1886–1962), British stage and silent film actress
 - Maud Diver (1867– 1945), English author in British India who wrote novels, short stories, biographies and journalistic pieces on Indian topics and about the English in India
 - Maud Durbin (1871–1936), American actress and writer
 - Maud Howe Elliott (1854–1948), American novelist and Pulitzer Prize winner
 - Maude Fealy (1883–1971), American stage and silent film actress
 - Maud Forget (born 1982), French actress
 - Maud Franklin (1857–1939), British painter and mistress of and model for artist James McNeill Whistler
 - Maud Frère (1923–1979), Belgian novelist
 - Maud Gatewood (1934–2004), American painter
 - Maud Hansson (1937–2020), Swedish actress
 - Maud Cuney Hare (1874–1936), American pianist and musicologist
 - Maud Hawinkels (born 1976), Dutch television presenter
 - Maud Hobson (1860 –1913), Australian-born English actress and burlesque performer
 - Maud Humphrey (1868–1940), American commercial illustrator and watercolorist
 - Maud Hyttenberg (1920–2009), Swedish actress
 - Maud Jeffries (1869–1946), American actress and popular subject of theatrical post-cards and photographs
 - Maud Lewis (1903–1970), Canadian folk artist
 - Maud Karpeles (1885–1976), British collector of folksongs and dance teacher
 - Maud Hart Lovelace (1892–1980), American writer
 - Alice Maud Krige (born 1954), South African actress and producer
 - Maud MacCarthy (Swami Omananda Puri; 1882–1967), Irish violinist, singer, writer, poet, esoteric teacher and authority on Indian music
 - Maud Madison (1870–1953), American actress and dancer
 - Maud Meyer, Sierra Leonean Nigerian jazz singer
 - Lucy Maud Montgomery (1874–1942), Canadian writer
 - Maud Molyneux (1948 –2008), French transgender actress, journalist, costume designer and activist
 - Maud Morgan (1860–1941), American harpist
 - Maud Morgan (1903–1999), American modern and abstract expressionist artist and art teacher
 - Maud Mulder (born 1981), Dutch singer who placed second in TV series Idols Netherlands
 - Maud Naftel (1856–1891), English watercolour painter
 - Maud Nelke (1891–1982), British socialite and art patron
 - Maud Powell (1867–1920), American violinist
 - Maud Hunt Squire (1873–1954), American painter and printmaker
 - Maud Sulter (1960–2008), Scottish fine artist and photographer
 - Maud Wagner (1877–1961), American circus performer and tattoo artist
 - Maud Welzen (born 1993), Dutch model
 - Maud Wyler (born 1982), French actress
 
Politics and activism
- Maud Bregeon (born 1991), French politician
 - Maud Adeline Cloudesley Brereton (1872–1946), British feminist and sanitary reformer
 - Maud Burnett (1863–1950), British politician who served as the first female mayor of Tynemouth
 - Maud Gatel, French politician of the Democratic Movement
 - Maud Gonne (1866–1953), English-born Irish revolutionary, feminist, actress and long-time poetic inspiration to William Butler Yeats
 - Maud Olivier (born 1953), French politician
 - Maud Olofsson (born 1955), Swedish politician and former leader of the Swedish Centre Party
 - Maud Ingersoll Probasco (1864– 1936), American suffragist and animal rights activist
 - Maud Thompson (1870–1962), American suffragist, women's rights activist and teacher
 - Maud von Ossietzky (1888–1974), Anglo-Indian suffragette and political activist in Germany
 - Maud Wood Park (1871–1955), American suffragist and women's rights activist
 
Sport
- Maud Banks (1879–1967), English-born American tennis player
 - Maud Berglund (1934–2000), Swedish freestyle swimmer
 - Maud Coutereels (born 1986), Belgian football midfielder
 - Maud Fontenoy (born 1977), French sailor known for rowing across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans
 - Maud Galtier (1913–2014), French tennis player
 - Maud Herbert (born 1974), French windsurfer
 - Maud Le Car (born 1992), Saint Martin-born French professional surfer and model
 - Maud Megens (born 1996), Dutch water polo player
 - Maud Medenou (born 1990), French basketball player
 - Maud Muir (born 2001), English rugby union player
 - Maud Roetgering (born 1992), Dutch footballer defender
 - Maud Rosenbaum (1902–1981), Italian-American track-and-field athlete and tennis player
 - Maud Titterton (1867–1932), British golfer
 - Maud van der Meer (born 1992), Dutch competitive swimmer
 
Other
- Maud Chadburn (1868–1957), British surgeon
 - Maud Cunard (1872–1948), American society hostess
 - Maud Cunnington (1869–1951), Welsh archaeologist
 - Maud de Boer-Buquicchio (born 1944), Dutch jurist
 - Maud Darwin (1861–1947), American socialite
 - Maud Frizon (born 1941), French shoe designer
 - Maud Galt (c. 1620 – c. 1670), Scottish woman accused of witchcraft
 - Maud McCarthy (1859–1949), nursing sister and British Army matron-in-chief
 - Maud Menten (1879–1960), Canadian physician-scientist who made significant contributions to enzyme kinetics and histochemistry
 - Maud Oakes (1903–1990), American ethnologist and writer who published research about the cultures of indigenous tribes in the Americas
 - Maud Sellers (1861–1939), British historian and museum curator
 - Maud Slye (1879 –1954), American pathologist
 - Maud West (1880–13 March 1964), British detective
 - Maud Wilde (1880–1965), American physician, organizational founder, and author
 
Fictional
- Maud, supporting protagonist of the webcomic Acception
 - Maud, secondary character in the 2011 French animated film A Monster in Paris, voiced by Ludivine Sagnier
 - Maud, revenge seeking mule in the comic strip And Her Name Was Maud, which first appeared in Hearst newspapers in 1904 and was written by Frederick Burr Opper; and in the 1916 animated film adaption
 - Maud, werecat in the fantasy book series The Inheritance Cycle, written by Christopher Paolini
 - Maud Bailey, main character in the 1990 Booker Prize for Fiction winning novel Possession, written by A. S. Byatt; and in the 2002 film adaption, where she is played by Gwyneth Paltrow; and in BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour serialised radio play adaption, where she is voiced by Jemma Redgrave
 - Maud Bagshaw, Dowager Baroness Bagshaw, character in the British period drama Downton Abbey, played by Imelda Staunton
 - Maud Beaton, character in the second series of HBO drama The Gilded Age, played by Nicole Brydon Bloom
 - Maud Brewster, the romantic interest of protagonist Humphrey Van Weyden in the 1904 adventure novel The Sea-Wolf, written by Jack London; also in the numerous film adaptions of the book
 - Maud Martha Brown, titular character in the 1953 novel Maud Martha, written by Pulitzer Prize winning African American poet Gwendolyn Brooks
 - Maud Grimes, wheelchair-using pensioner in the British soap Coronation Street, played by Elizabeth Bradley
 - Maud Gunneson, character in the TV series Penny Dreadful, played by Hannah Tointon
 - Maud Horsham, widowed grandmother living with Alzheimer's disease who investigates a double mystery in the 2019 BBC drama series Elizabeth Is Missing, played by Glenda Jackson (present) and Liv Hill (younger)
 - Maud Lilly, one of the central characters in the 2002 historical crime novel Fingersmith, written by Welsh novelist Sarah Waters; and in the 2005 BBC TV adaptation Fingersmith, where she was played by Elaine Cassidy
 - Maud MacMuckle, also known as Ever Madder Aunt Maud, one of the principal characters in the Eddie Dickens trilogy of children's books, written by Philip Ardagh
 - Maud Muller, titular subject of the 1856 poem, written by American Quaker poet John Greenleaf Whittier
 - Maud O'Hara, character in the 2024 Disney+ series Rivals, played by Victoria Smurfit
 - Maud Pie, older sister of Pinkie Pie from the My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic episode of the same name, voiced by Ingrid Nilson
 - Maud Silver, a retired governess-turned-private detective featured in 32 novels written by Patricia Wentworth
 - Maud Smith, character in the 1913 American silent short comedy film Almost a Rescue, played by Billie Bennett
 - Maud Spellbody, Mildred's best friend in The Worst Witch children's book series, written by Jill Murphy
 - Maud Watts, fictional working class suffragette and central character in the 2015 film Suffragette, played by Carey Mulligan
 - Katie/Maud, central character in the 2019 British psychological horror film Saint Maud, played by Morfydd Clark
 
See also
- Matilda (disambiguation)
 - Maude (disambiguation)
 - Maudie (disambiguation)
 - Princess Maud (disambiguation)
 - Queen Maud (disambiguation)
 
References
- ^ https://www.ancestry.co.uk/genealogy/records/mawd-ferch-mael_24776958
 - ^ "Origin and Meaning of the Name Maud". babynamesworld. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
 - ^ "Maud - Name Meaning and Origin". thinkbabynames.com. Retrieved 2008-09-29.