Wulf was one of the most prolific elements in early Germanic names. It could figure as the first element in Germanic dithematic name, as in Wulfstan, but was especially common especially as the second element, in the form -ulf, -olf as in Cynewulf, Rudolph, Ludolf, Adolf, etc. Förstemann explains this as originally motivated by the wolf as an animal sacred to Wodanaz, but notes that the large number of names indicates that the element had become a meaningless suffix of male names at an early time. Some early missionaries among Germanic folk still used it, like bishop Wulfilas however his family had been adopted earlier by the Goths. By the tenth century, there was clearly no pagan connotation left with such names, and saints and bishops bore names such as Wulfstan or Wolfgang).