Loen is a Norse place name from Norway, taken from a fjord village and scenic valley.
Loen carries the quiet authority of a landscape name — it belongs to a spectacularly beautiful village nestled at the tip of the Nordfjord in western Norway, surrounded by glacier-fed lakes and peaks that plunge dramatically into the water. The place-name itself is Old Norse in origin, likely related to *lón*, meaning a small sheltered bay or inlet, that still water protected from the open sea. For centuries Loen was known mainly to locals and Norwegian mountaineers; in the modern era it has drawn travelers seeking what Scandinavians call *stillhet* — profound quietude.
As a given name, Loen sits within the broader Nordic tradition of nature-derived names, alongside Bjorn (bear), Ingrid (meadow of Ing), and Dag (day). It has the lean, single-syllable elegance that characterizes many Scandinavian names and travels well across language families — neither glaringly foreign nor generic. In Norwegian and Dutch-speaking contexts, it appears occasionally as a masculine name, though its soft vowel ending has attracted parents across genders in more recent decades.
Beyond Scandinavia, Loen appeals as an alternative to the much more common Leon (Greek: *leon*, lion) or the French Léon, offering the same clean sound with an earthier, more geological resonance. It is a name that feels like open water and cold air — spare, clear, and unhurried.