Kestrel comes from the English bird name for the small falcon, giving it a clear nature-based meaning.
Kestrel is a nature name drawn from one of Europe's most recognizable raptors — the common kestrel (*Falco tinnunculus*), a small falcon famous for its extraordinary ability to hover motionless against the wind, eyes fixed on the ground below, before dropping in a precise strike. The English word 'kestrel' descends from the Old French *cresserelle*, likely an imitation of the bird's high, rattling cry, and related forms appear across the Romance languages. The kestrel has been a symbol of vigilance, patience, and fierce independence in British natural history and falconry tradition for centuries.
The name entered the literary imagination most powerfully through Barry Hines's 1968 novel *A Kestrel for a Knave*, filmed by Ken Loach as *Kes* — a spare, devastating story of a working-class Yorkshire boy who trains a kestrel and discovers, briefly, the possibility of dignity and connection in a world that offers him neither. The book became a set text in British schools and lodged the kestrel in the national cultural memory as a symbol of wild beauty surviving in hostile conditions. This literary weight gives the name Kestrel an unusual depth for a nature name, carrying both ecological precision and social resonance.
As a given name, Kestrel is rare but growing within the nature-name revival that has brought Wren, Lark, Hawk, and Falcon back into naming conversations. It suits either gender comfortably, and its visual and sonic qualities — that crisp initial K, the swooping internal vowels — give it an athletic elegance. Parents choosing Kestrel are typically making a deliberate statement: this is a name from the wild world, for a child they hope will be sharp-eyed, patient, and free.