An English word name from Old French chapele, meaning "chapel" or "small church."
Chapel is a word name of remarkable etymological depth, tracing back through Old French chapele to Medieval Latin capella — meaning, originally, a short cloak. The word's transformation into an architectural term is bound up in the legend of Saint Martin of Tours, the 4th-century Roman soldier-turned-bishop who famously cut his military cloak in half to share with a freezing beggar. That cloak (cappa) was preserved as a sacred relic and housed in a portable shrine carried into battle by Frankish kings for protection; the priest who guarded it was the capellanus (chaplain), and the structure that housed it became the capella.
A chapel thus began as a relic container and evolved into the intimate, human-scale sacred space we know today — neither the grandeur of a cathedral nor the domesticity of a home, but something in between: a place for quiet devotion. As a given name, Chapel is extraordinarily rare and sits within a small but growing category of architectural and sacred-space names — alongside Haven, Zion, and Sanctuary — that appeal to parents who want spiritual resonance without denominational specificity. The name carries an inherent sense of stillness and intention: a chapel is where people go for weddings, for grief, for quiet thought.
Its use as a first name feels poetic and slightly daring, the kind of choice that invites a story every time it is introduced. It is neither masculine nor feminine by convention, which gives it a gender-fluid appeal consistent with current naming trends, and its single clear syllable gives it a crispness that counterbalances its lyrical meaning.