Wikipedia
Ermengarde
Ermengarde or Ermengard or Irmingard or Irmgard is a feminine given name of German origin derived from the German words "ermen," meaning "whole, universal" and "gard" meaning "enclosure, protection". Armgarð is a Faroese version. It is the name of various historical women:
- Ermengarde of Hesbaye (778-818), wife of Louis the Pious
- Irmgard of Chiemsee (died 866), also known as Ermengard, daughter of Louis the German, remembered in the calendar as a saint
- Ermengarde of Anjou (disambiguation), multiple people
- Ermengarde of Tonnerre (1032 - 1083), wife of William I, Count of Nevers
- Ermengarde of Nevers, daughter of Renauld II, Count of Nevers
- Ermengarde of Narbonne, Viscountess of Narbonne
- Ermengarde de Beaumont (1170-1234), wife of William I of Scotland
- Ermengard of Provence, wife of Boso of Provence
- Ermengard of Tours, wife of Lothair I
- Ermengarde of Auvergne, mother of William I of Aquitaine
- Ermengarde of Burgundy, wife of Gilbert, Duke of Burgundy
- Ermengarde of Maine (died 1126), wife of Fulk V of Anjou
- Ermengarde of Zutphen (died 1138), mother of Henry I, first count of Guelders and Zutphen
- Princess Irmingard of Bavaria (1923 - 2010)