Dahl or Dahle is a surname of Germanic origin.[1] Dahl, which means valley in the North Germanic languages (tal in German, dale in northern England English), is common in Germany, Norway, Denmark, Sweden and the Faroe Islands. The origin of the German forms Dahl and Dahle may have been in medieval Westphalia. In Germany about 11 places are called Dahl. In the Netherlands, a suburb of the city of Nijmegen (which in turn is named after an old estate in the area[2]) is called "Heyerdaal" (also spelled as "Heijerdaal"), in which "daal" also means "valley". Other examples are "Bloemendaal," "Rozendaal," and "Roosendaal." There are several variations as it was common to add a suffix to Dahl in order to denote the name bearer's original locale or occupation. You also find several variations of -dahl used with prefixes (Heyerdahl, Heimendahl...).[3]

Dahl
Other names
Variant form(s)Dahle, Dahlen, Dahlin, Dahlinger, Dahlem, Dallen, Dallin, Dahlstrom, Dale

Dahl edit

Arts and media edit

Education and academia edit

Military edit

  • Arne Dagfin Dahl (1894–1990), Norwegian general and commander of the Independent Norwegian Brigade Group in Germany
  • Larry G. Dahl (1949–1971), US Army veteran and Medal of Honor recipient

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Religion edit

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Dahle edit

Arts and music edit

Politics edit

  • Herman Dahle (1855–1920), American politician from Wisconsin; U.S. congressman
  • Kevin Dahle (born 1960), American politician from Minnesota; state legislator
  • Torstein Dahle (born 1947), Norwegian politician and economist

Sports edit

  • Mona Dahle (born 1970), Norwegian Olympic handball player

Other edit

  • Johann Dahle (1749-1847), Hessian soldier and pioneering Virginian
  • Øystein Dahle (born 1938), Norwegian businessman and organizational leader

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Dahl". Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. 2013.
  2. ^ "HeyendaalCat".
  3. ^ Axel Gröblinghoff: Großhau - Von altem Eisen und Wäldern bis zum Horizont, Germany 1995