Feyre is a modern literary name popularized in fantasy fiction and associated with a fair, enchanted sound.
Feyre entered the naming conversation almost entirely through literature: it is the name of the protagonist of Sarah J. Maas's *A Court of Thorns and Roses* (2015), a fantasy novel that became a global phenomenon, particularly among young adult readers and their parents. Feyre Archeron is a mortal huntress who crosses into a world of dangerous, immortal faeries — and her name, unusual and slightly archaic-sounding, perfectly suits a character who straddles two worlds.
Maas has not publicly sourced the etymology in detail, but the name has clear resonance with Old English *fæger* (fair, beautiful, lovely), the ancestor of the modern word "fair," and possibly with the Old French *fée* (fairy), making it a quietly apt name for a character embedded in faerie mythology. The series sold tens of millions of copies and generated passionate online communities — often called the "ACOTAR fandom" — and this cultural saturation translated directly into naming trends. By the early 2020s, Feyre began appearing in birth records in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and beyond, one of a handful of literary names (alongside Katniss, Hermione, and Daenerys) that crossed from fiction into the real world with measurable statistical footprint.
What makes Feyre durable as a real name is that it doesn't read as obviously borrowed. Unlike Khaleesi, which requires knowledge of *Game of Thrones* to decode, Feyre looks plausibly like an old name that was always there — a variant spelling of Faye, perhaps, or a revival of something medieval. It has the texture of an heirloom while being, in practice, a thoroughly contemporary choice.