Iceland is a place-based name taken directly from the country, signaling identity through a geographic toponym.
Iceland as a given name is extraordinarily rare, making it one of the most striking examples of the place-name naming trend taken to its outer edge. The toponym itself comes from Old Norse *Ísland*, meaning simply 'ice land,' a name attached to the island by the Norwegian settler Hrafna-Flóki Vilgerðarson around 870 CE after a harsh winter. The name has always carried a certain irony — Iceland is in fact verdant and geothermally active, while neighboring Greenland is the icier land.
That nominal misdirection was allegedly intentional, designed to discourage too many settlers. Place-name given names have a long history: Florence, Georgia, Savannah, Adelaide, and Troy all began as geography before becoming personal names. London, Brooklyn, Paris, and Phoenix represent a more modern wave.
Iceland fits the far end of this spectrum — it is unmistakably a country name, which gives it both grandeur and a certain audacity. Unlike more assimilated place names, it has not yet softened into the cultural furniture of naming. For parents drawn to Iceland as a given name, the associations are powerful: Norse mythology, volcanic landscapes, the aurora borealis, a society consistently ranked among the world's happiest and most gender-equal.
The name evokes exploration, stark beauty, and self-sufficiency. Whether it will find broader adoption or remain a genuine rarity depends on whether the next generation of parents continues pushing the boundaries of what counts as a name — a boundary that has shifted considerably in a single generation.