Isela

Meaning of Isela

Isela—rendered ee-SEH-lah in Spanish and, with a softened final vowel, ee-SEH-luh in American English—traces its lineage to the Visigothic-Germanic Gisela, whose root gīsl signified a “pledge,” the legal hostages once exchanged to secure peace among medieval courts. Carried into Iberian usage and later disseminated throughout the Hispanic diaspora, the name reached the United States by the mid-20th century and has remained a low-frequency constant: since 1945 it has seldom strayed outside the lower third of the national Top 1000, peaking at rank 683 in 1998 and averaging roughly one hundred registrations per year in the 2020s. Contemporary bearers such as Mexican film icon Isela Vega, Arizona legislator Isela Blanc, and automotive executive Isela Costantini reinforce associations with artistic resolve, civic advocacy, and executive acumen. Consequently, Isela offers parents a bilingual choice that balances rarity with recognizability while embodying a historical promise of fidelity and strength.

Pronunciation

Spanish

  • Pronunced as ee-SEH-lah (/iˈselä/)

American English

  • Pronunced as ee-SEH-luh (/iˈsɛlə/)

U.S. Popularity Chart

States Popularity Chart

Similar Names to Isela

Notable People Named Isela

Isela Vega -
Susan Clarke
Curated bySusan Clarke

Assistant Editor