Alan is a masculine given name in the English language. The modern English
Alan, and French
Alain, are derived from the name of the
Alans. Related to the
Scythians, the Alans were known to
Classical authors in the 1st century BC. The Alans settled in
Western Europe in the
Early Middle Ages. Because there is no recorded use of the ethnonym
Alani prior to the 1st century, and because no location with a
placename derived from
Alani can be shown to be older than the 5th century, it is likely that the name was derived from the Iranian Alan people. because the long vowel in the second syllable would produce
Old Breton -o-,
Middle Breton -eu- and
Modern Breton -e- and not the attested spelling with an
-a-. In
Breton,
alan is a colloquial term for a fox and may originally have meant "deer", making it cognate with
Old Welsh alan (cf.
Canu Aneirin, B2.28, line 1125:
"gnaut i-lluru alan buan bithei", "it was usual for him to be fleet like a
deer"),
Modern Welsh elain (plural
alanedd) "young deer" (and the plant name
alan "coltsfoot, elecampane"), coming from a
Brittonic root
*alan- or
*elan (also attested in
Gaulish personal names such as
Elenos,
Elenius, derived form
Elantia and in
Celtiberian in personal names such as
Elanus,
Elaesus, and
Ela), ultimately derived from
Proto-Indo-European *(H1)el-Hn- "deer, hind" (perhaps denoting an animal - generally
cervids - with red or brown fur). In Ireland and Gaelic-speaking Scotland, Alan may also be an
Anglicisation of an
Irish word (with
diminutive suffix) meaning "
rock". Similarly, according to Patrick Woulfe, the Irish name
Ailín is derived from diminutive
ail, which means "noble", "rock". Woulfe stated that this name is a
pet form of some other name beginning with the first element
Ail-. Forms of the Gaelic name appear in early British records; the
Latin form
Ailenus was recorded by
Adomnán (died 704). The name Alan possibly is derived from the Greek name
Alexander, through a process of progressive phonetic reduction that occurred over several centuries in the Romance-speaking world. The most widely accepted etymological trajectory is the following
apocopic (shortening) sequence:
Alex
ander →
Ale
ander →
Alander → Alan. ==Variations of the name==