A short form of Edith or Edie, from Old English elements meaning 'wealth' and 'war.'
Edy functions as both a standalone name and a familiar form of Edith, a name of rich Old English provenance. Edith derives from the elements "ēad" (wealth, fortune, prosperity) and "gyð" (strife, battle) — yielding the striking compound meaning of "prosperous in war" or "blessed struggle." This combination of material abundance and martial courage was prized in Anglo-Saxon culture, and the name was borne by several notable pre-Conquest figures, including Saint Edith of Wilton, a 10th-century princess-nun revered for her piety and learning.
The diminutive Edy (and its variant Edie) carved out its own identity over the centuries, particularly in the 20th century when nickname-names gained social standing as birth names. The variant spelling with a -y ending gives the name a buoyant, modern quality. The most culturally resonant bearer of the form was Edie Sedgwick, the luminous Factory Girl and Andy Warhol muse of the 1960s, whose platinum-cropped image and tragic arc burned the name into the consciousness of a generation.
Edith Piaf, the immortal French chanteuse known as "La Môme," further amplified the name's artistic associations across the Atlantic. Today Edy occupies charming territory between vintage and current — it has the warmth of a grandmother's name with the accessibility of a playground name. Its brevity is an asset, and the -y ending keeps it from feeling too formal. It is the kind of name that ages gracefully through every stage of life.