Hendy can derive from Welsh place elements meaning "old house," and also appears as a surname-style given name.
Hendy is a name with proud medieval English roots, derived from the Old English adjective 'hende' or 'hendy,' meaning courteous, gracious, skilled, or gentle. In Middle English literature, to call someone 'hendy' was a genuine compliment—it described a person of refined manner and social grace. The word appears in Chaucer's 'The Miller's Tale,' where the charming, manipulative clerk Nicholas is repeatedly called 'hende Nicholas,' a characterization that combines his social polish with a wry commentary on how charm can be weaponized.
As a given name, Hendy enjoyed usage in medieval England before falling into near-obscurity during the early modern period, when the adjective itself passed out of common speech. It survives today as a surname in English-speaking countries, most notably in Wales and Cornwall, and has seen occasional revival as a given name for parents drawn to Anglo-Saxon linguistic heritage. It also functions as a nickname or diminutive for names like Henry and Henderson, which keeps it in circulation at the margins of mainstream naming culture.
In the twenty-first century, Hendy has a certain rare-book quality to it—a name that signals a deliberate engagement with Old English heritage without being as well-known as Aldric or Edmund. It carries an appealing softness despite its age, and the '-y' ending gives it an approachable, informal energy. For families with English or Welsh roots who want something genuinely old but not stuffy, Hendy offers a quietly distinguished choice.