From Germanic ger (spear) + thrud (strength), meaning 'spear of strength.'
Gertrude descends from the Old High German elements "ger" (spear) and "trut" (strength or beloved), giving it a warrior-poet duality that defined medieval Germanic culture. It arrived in England with the Normans and was quickly adopted by the Christian calendar through Saint Gertrude the Great, the thirteenth-century German mystic whose visions of the Sacred Heart shaped Catholic devotional practice for centuries. A second Saint Gertrude — of Nivelles, patroness of travelers and those afraid of mice — further cemented the name in ecclesiastical tradition.
Shakespeare immortalized it in Hamlet, where Queen Gertrude navigates moral ambiguity with a complexity that later critics found far richer than the play's surface judgment allows. In the twentieth century, Gertrude Stein reshaped it entirely — her experimental prose, her Paris salon, her friendship with Picasso and Hemingway made "Gertrude" synonymous with avant-garde intellectual authority. Gertrude Ederle, the first woman to swim the English Channel, gave the name an athletic heroism; Gertrude Bell, the British archaeologist and diplomat who helped draw the borders of modern Iraq, gave it geopolitical weight.
The name retreated sharply from fashion in the mid-twentieth century, acquiring the patina of a grandmother's name. But names follow long cycles, and Gertrude — with its strong consonants, its nickname "Trudy," and its genuinely impressive historical résumé — is positioned for the kind of revival that has already reclaimed names like Beatrice and Edith.