From Old French meaning 'hammer,' famously borne by Charles Martel.
Martel means hammer in Old French and Medieval Latin, a blunt, definitive name whose most famous bearer made it synonymous with decisive force. Charles Martel — Charles the Hammer — was the Frankish military leader who in 732 CE defeated the Umayyad army at the Battle of Tours, a confrontation that historians have long debated as a turning point in European history. His epithet became, across the medieval period, a kind of template for the name itself: Martel carried the weight of a blow well-struck, a leader who does not equivocate.
He was also the grandfather of Charlemagne, cementing the Carolingian dynasty that would shape medieval Europe for centuries. As a surname, Martel spread through France, England (via the Normans), and the wider Francophone world. Geoffrey Martel, Count of Anjou in the eleventh century, bore it as a hereditary name.
In the world of spirits, Martell cognac, founded in Cognac, France in 1715 by Jean Martell, made the name globally recognizable on a very different register — refined, amber-hued, associated with French luxury. The brand remains one of the oldest cognac houses in the world, and the name now inhabits two cultural registers simultaneously: medieval fortitude and Gallic elegance. As a given name, Martel feels modern and cross-cultural — short, percussive, easy across languages.
It reads equally well as a French heritage name, a surname-style first name in the American tradition, or a name in Francophone African communities where French naming culture has blended with local traditions. It is, in every sense, a name that lands with impact.