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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

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Yearly Archives: 2012

Vienna and Cuba: Birth Announcements from Country and Regional Areas (June)

27 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Ava Kathryn and Harvey John (Angus)

Blake Robert and Jackson John

Jasper Riley and Noah Campbell (Brady, Emmerson)

Patrick Thomas and William James (Tamika, Jessica)

Sam Timothy and Jack Andrew

 

Girls

Brooklyn Sage (Lacey, Remi)

Claudia Pamela Margaret (Angus, Elsie)

Clementine Millicent Alice (Lachlan, Harrison, Hamish)

Coa Scarlett (Paxton)

Elizabeth Chau (Axton, Marcella, Daniel)

Elliette Ashlyn Grace (Lincoln)

Elsie Doris (Max)

Evelyn Eyre

Harper Amani (Ryder, Beckett)

Indiana Grace Elizabeth

Indie Etra (Billy)

Khayli Ruth

Lexie Susan Claire (Jackson)

Luca Jane (Lochie)

Maeve Violet (Evelyn, Alexander)

Montana Ann (Josh)

Nellie Kate (Bailey, Chase)

Sarah Grace Helena (Angus)

Signe Marlen (Mia)

Starley Makayla (Vanessa)

Sylvia May (Ilia, Oliver)

Tillie Layne

Tully Asha (Louie, Scarlett)

Vienna Rose Adele

Zoe Charlotte Narelle (Katheryn, Alexander)

 

Boys

Bailey Patrick Craig

Brighton Alan John

Cadel Regan (Corin)

Carter Hawke

Cuba Jay (Coco, Nelson, Marqus)

Dallas Avery (Gabriel, Sacha)

Digby John

Draylan Nate Barry (Lowan)

Dylan Thomas (Hayley, Evan)

Ezekiel Moodie

Gabriel Phoenix Craig

Hunter Justin James

Isaac Henry William (Elijah)

Jobe Thomas

Monty Gibb (Charlie, Eli)

Oakley Jye Thomas (Tiahna, Harleigh)

Oliver Flynn Kohlo

Raff Joseph

Rhett Kade

Riley Michael Keith

Talon Jed (Mason)

Tyrese Andrew

Walt Lawrence

Zac William Robert

Zealan Robin James

(Picture shows a misty winter sunrise in the Hunter Valley near Newcastle; photo from ABC Rural)

Celebrity Baby News: AFL Babies

26 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: AFL Babies

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Ben Hudson from the Brisbane Lions, and his wife Rita, welcomed their son Stirling Frankie on July 24. Stirling Hudson joins big brother Ignatius, aged 2.

David Johnson, a former player for the Geelong Cats, and his wife Stacey, welcomed their son Reggie last week.

The Johnsons have had a tough time lately, as Stacey was diagnosed with a Sarcoma cancer during her pregnancy, and baby Reggie was born prematurely, at 29 weeks. In order to help out the popular couple, the Geelong Football Club organised a “backyard blitz“, where club members volunteered their time to help give the Johnsons’ backyard a makeover. Local businesses donated materials, and the whole project was completed on one weekend with the help of 90 volunteers.

(Photo shows the Geelong Football Club helping out the Johnsons; Dave is the one on the ground)

Famous Name: Apollo

25 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Babylonian names, epithets and titles, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, Greek names, honouring, locational names, middle names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, name trends, Sumerian names, title names

Last Friday marked the anniversary of the first moon landing, which took place on July 20 1969. The NASA spaceflight programme responsible was famously named Apollo, and the name was chosen in 1960, during the administration of President Eisenhower.

It was named after the Greek god of the sun by NASA manager Abe Silverstein, and he later said that he named it as carefully as if he was naming his baby. Dr Silverstein had been reading a book of Greek mythology, and was struck by an illustration of the god Apollo riding his chariot across the sun; this seemed in line with the grand scale of the project they had in mind.

It became far grander after the election of President John F. Kennedy, for while Eisenhower was on the fence about the whole space thing, Kennedy had made winning the Space Race against the Soviet Union a key campaign promise. Like many people on their way to power, President Kennedy hadn’t considered how much such a promise would cost, and when he found out the price, he also started to go a bit lukewarm on the idea.

Once the Soviet Union became the first to send a man (cosmonaut Yuri Gargarin) into space in 1961, it all suddenly seemed a lot more pressing, and President Kennedy vowed that the United States must be the first nation to land a man on the moon, and would do so by the end of the decade.

Even some people at NASA thought this was going a bit far, and wondered if the President understood how difficult it would be. No he didn’t, but that’s what leaders are for – to come up with big impossible dreams, and then let the brainiacs sort out the technical details.

As we all know, they did manage to get to the moon by the end of the 1960s, on spaceflight Apollo 11, and history was made – not just American history, but world history. Around the globe, 500 million people watched the moon landing on their TV sets, and Australia played a vital role in the television broadcast of the moon landing.

The images broadcast from the moon were received by three tracking antennae – one in California, one in the delightfully named Honeysuckle Creek near Canberra, and one in Parkes, New South Wales. The very first television pictures were received by Honeysuckle Creek, and then NASA alternated between California and Parkes, trying to find the best quality pictures. Less than ten minutes into the broadcast, the signals from Parkes were so superior that NASA stayed with them for the rest of the two-and-a-half hour television broadcast.

The behind-the-scenes of the television broadcast seems to have been very confused. One of the biggest mysteries to me is how NASA managed to lose all the footage we sent them. They didn’t throw them in a cupboard and forget about them, they actually taped over them. I mean, this isn’t the family holiday to Fiji we’re talking about, it’s the freaking moon landing! With baffling carelessness, they also lost the back-up copy Australia sent them. After an exhaustive search, a bootleg copy of the original broadcast was found in Australia in time for the fortieth anniversary of the moon landing. Phew!

The god Apollo who had inspired the name of the space programme was one of the most important and complex in the Greek and Roman pantheon. Always depicted as a handsome and gloriously athletic young man, he was the god of many things – light, the sun, prophecy, healing, music and poetry amongst them. I think of him as a very appropriate god for Australia, because (apart from all the sunshine he’s blessed us with), he was also a god who ruled colonists, and protected flocks and herds. As a former colony with a strong interest in farming, it’s a wonder we don’t celebrate him more often in official imagery.

His name is so ancient that the meaning of it is now very obscure. The Greeks themselves tried to link the name to Greek words that sounded similar such as those for “destroy”, “redeem”, “purification”, “simple” and “ever-shooting”. The name was connected to the word apella, meaning “assembly”; the Apella was a Spartan political meeting held on each full moon, aptly enough. This word originally meant “a wall, a fence”, so you can see that the Greeks saw the political process as being protected by the god, just as he protected flocks of animals. Apollo’s earliest role seems to have been as a protector against evil.

The name is likely to be older than Greek, as there are a number of gods from the Middle East with similar-sounding names. The official title of the Babylonian sun god Nergal was Aplu Enlil, meaning “son of Enlil”. Enlil means “lord of the storm”, and he was the chief god of the Sumerians. Not only does Aplu sound like Apollo, but the parallels between chief storm gods Enlil and Zeus, and their sons, sun gods Nergal and Apollo are obvious. If so, the name Apollo simply means “the son of”, like the Gaelic prefix Mac.

The meaning is far less important than what it symbolises, for classical Greece made Apollo the principle of light, harmony, order and reason. This is the Apollo who presided over contests of music, art and literature, and who inspired the greatest composers and poets. But he had a darker side too from his Eastern origins, which were shamanistic and oracular. His Delphic priestesses sometimes perished in their efforts to hear his divine voice, people who died suddenly were said to have been struck down by the god, and he also brought plague and pestilence as a mark of his displeasure. He demonstrates that everything being light, bright, clear and intellectual are not enough – we also need intuition, awe and mystery in our psychological make-up.

Apart from the god and the space programme, the name may remind you of fictional characters Apollo Creed, from the Rocky movies, and Captain Apollo from Battlestar Galactica. A famous example of a real life Apollo from our own region is the Samoan-New Zealand rugby player Apollo Perelini, a relative of Australian soccer star Tim Cahill. Perelini got his name because he was born the day the Apollo 11 space project was launched – July 16 1969. His middle name is 11. An Australian link is the tourist town of Apollo Bay on the Victorian coast, so named because the ship Apollo sheltered from a storm there.

Apollo is a strong, handsome and spectacular name which commands attention. It’s garnering some interest and perhaps greater use, as it fits in with the trends for mythological names and names ending in O. I suspect this might be a name where many people love the sound and associations, but fear that calling their son after such a divine figure may seem a little hubristic. If so, it makes a brilliant middle name. Many parents are becoming a bit more daring with boy’s names, and if you prefer names without a built-in nickname, Apollo is one to consider.

Celebrity Baby News: Andrew and Olesja Laming

24 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Federal MP Andrew Laming, and his wife Olesja, welcomed their daughter Isobel today, July 24. Isobel Laming was born at Mater Private Redlands at 8 am, and weighed 3.05 kg (just under 7 pounds). Isobel joins big sister Sophie-Claire, aged 3.

Andrew represents the seat of Bowman in Queensland for the Liberal National Party of Queensland, first winning the seat in 2004 for the Liberal Party of Australia. Before entering politics, he was a doctor specialising in ophthalmology, and also holds a diploma in gynaecology and obstetrics. He gained his Master in Public Administration from Harvard University, and holds post-graduate degrees in Public Policy and Public Health. He has cleared land mines in Afghanistan with Halo Trust while working as a war surgeon, done research in trachoma and other eye diseases, and established health databases and a volunteering service. He has been part of the World Bank Group’s Health, Nutrition and Population Section in Washington DC, and a Health Planning Specialist in East Timor. Andrew is the son of former Queensland state MP Bruce Laming.

Olesja (nee Baturevica) is from Latvia, and her background is in banking. Andrew met her in 2005, while on a study tour of Latvia. The couple has been married since 2007.

(Photo shows Andrew and Olesja after the birth of Sophie-Claire).

Celebrity Baby News: Shane and Niki Rose

24 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Equestrian Shane Rose, and his wife Niki, welcomed their daughter Olivia Cleo on May 8. Olivia Rose was born at Nepean Private Hospital at 8.22 am, weighed 3.7 kg (8 pounds 3 ounces), and measured 51 cm.

Shane joined his local Pony Club at the age of 5, and represented Australia at the Young Rider Trans-Tasman Competition at 21, riding Mr Joe Cool. Since then he has competed at many events, most notably at the 2008 Beijing Olympics riding All Luck, when the Australian team gained a silver medal in Eventing. Shane had already reached London when he had to pull out of this year’s Olympics, due to his horse Taurus suffering a minor injury. Shane will be replaced by Megan Jones, riding Allofasudden.

Niki (nee Chapman) has also represented Australia in Eventing, and trains young horses in Dressage and Eventing. She and Shane run Bimbadeen Park, a facility for breeding and training horses, and are on the Elite Squad with the New South Wales Institute of Sport. Shane and Niki were married early last year.

Waltzing With … Olivia

22 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Waltzing with ...

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

anagram names, created names, english names, European name popularity, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, Latin names, locational names, name combinations, name history, name meaning, name popularity, New Zealand name popularity, popular names, saints names, Shakespearean names, sibsets, tree names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

This blog post was first published on July 22 2012, and substantially revised and re-posted on May 4 2016.

This Friday, July 27, it is Schools Tree Day. I always think this is a great way to start off the Spring Term, as it gets students out of the classroom and connecting with nature. This year there will be an emphasis on programs where children plant and care for trees in public bushland, teaching them about the environment and community responsibility.

National Tree Day (on Sunday July 29), and its “junior partner”, Schools Tree Day, are Australia’s biggest tree-planting events. National Tree Day was co-founded by pop singer Olivia Newton-John and Australian environmental group Planet Ark in 1996; since then more than 3.8 million people have planted over 22 million trees and shrubs.

Olivia Newton-John is an ambassador to the United Nations Environmental Program, and has won awards for her efforts on behalf of the environment from the Environmental Media Association and the Rainforest Alliance. This year she was named one of Australia’s Living Treasures by the National Trust. In honour of Ms Newton-John’s achievements and charity work, I am taking a closer look at her first name.

Name Information
Olivia is a name invented by William Shakespeare for his play Twelfth Night. It is generally believed that Shakespeare based it on the Latin name Oliva, meaning “olive” and pronounced oh-LEEV-ah.

Oliva of Brescia was a Roman saint martyred in the 2nd century. Interestingly, the saint is now often known as Saint Olivia, to distinguish her from a legendary saint from the 9th century called Oliva of Palermo, and known as Blessed Olive.

Blessed Olive was a beautiful thirteen year old girl of noble family who was kidnapped by Muslims and martyred by them after the usual imprisonment and torture. It’s clearly a piece of propaganda, but she is still a patron saint of music. Confusingly, sometimes she is also known as Saint Olivia, to distinguish her from Saint Oliva of Brescia.

Shakespeare chose the name Olivia for a beautiful countess of Illyria, an ancient land in the Balkans on the Adriatic Coast, where Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro and Albania are now. As its name suggests, Twelfth Night was written as an entertainment for the end of the Christmas season; its first performance was after Candlemas in 1602.

The eve of Epiphany was supposed to be a time when all the usual rules were turned topsy-turvy, so it is not surprising that cross-dressing plays a big part in the plot. The countess Olivia falls in love with a woman named Viola (an anagram of Oliva, while Olivia is an anagram of I, Viola) believing her to be a man named Cesario. The joke in Shakespeare’s day, when only males were permitted on stage, was that the role of Viola was played by a boy pretending to be a woman pretending to be man.

Olivia is such a stunning beauty that Viola’s twin brother Sebastian marries her virtually on sight, in an almost dreamlike state, while she thinks he is “Cesario”. They both marry under false pretences, but it is less illegal than Olivia marrying Viola. It’s a comedy, so everything works out.

The name Olivia was too good not be used by other writers, so a character named Olivia is in William Wycherley’s 1676 play The Plain Dealer, cleverly utilising a similar plot to Twelfth Night. In Oliver Goldsmith’s 1766 novel The Vicar of Wakefield, Olivia is the vicar’s strikingly beautiful daughter. In an impetuous rush of passion, she is tricked into a fake marriage with a womanising squire; luckily, it turns out the squire himself was tricked and the marriage is real.

A real marriage to an evil womaniser doesn’t sound like much of a happy ending for Olivia, but it’s happier than not being married at all, it seems. Arresting beauty and dodgy weddings seem the hallmark of the literary Olivia.

Olivia has been in use as an English name since the 17th century, and became more common in the 19th. An early famous namesake was the English socialite Olivia Devenish, who married Thomas Raffles, the vice-governor of Java.

Olivia Miss Newton-John emigrated to Australia from Britain in the 1950s, and during the 1960s was a regular on Australian radio and television before becoming a successful country-pop singer overseas. The name Olivia first appeared on the Top 100 in 1978 at #64, the same year that Olivia starred as Sandy in the hit musical film Grease.

The name Olivia was only on the Top 100 sporadically in the 1980s, never getting any higher than its initial position (Newton-John’s “sexy” image in this decade probably wasn’t a help). It began rising in the 1990s after Olivia’s career quietened down and she put away the spandex, shooting up to #46 in 1990. By 1998 it was in the Top 10 at #5, and it peaked at #1 in 2005, and then again in 2014.

Currently Olivia is #2 nationally, #2 in New South Wales, #1 in Victoria, #2 in Queensland, #3 in South Australia, #1 in Western Australia, #26 in Tasmania, #6 in the Northern Territory, and #4 in the Australian Capital Territory.

In the US, the name Olivia has charted consistently in the Top 1000 since the 19th century, rarely leaving the Top 500. It has been in the Top 100 since the 1990s, and is currently at its peak position of #2. In the UK it has been in the Top 100 since the 1990s, and peaked at #1 in 2008-2010. It is currently #2. Olivia is also #2 in New Zealand, and is popular across the English-speaking world as well as East and West Europe, and Scandinavia. Olivia is a name that travels very well.

Coincidentally or not, the rise and stability of Olivia looks similar to the trajectory of the name Oliver, which is now at #1 – in fact, the two names were #1 together in 2014. Olivia’s success may have helped her twin sister Olive rise through the ranks, for this retro charmer began zooming up the charts in the 2000s, and is now in the Top 100.

Other famous namesakes include Hollywood star Olivia de Havilland; author Olivia Manning; George Harrison’s widow, Olivia Harrison; and actresses Olivia Wilde and Olivia Williams. Although there are many fictional Olivias, one of the most famous is the adorable pig from the children’s book and TV series, named after the author’s niece (I’ve noticed many baby Olivias seem to get toy pigs as gifts).

Lovely Olivia has become one of our modern classics, currently at the peak of its success and still stable after 17 years in the Top 10. I think, like that other Shakespearean coinage Jessica, it will be with us for some time to come.

POLL RESULT
Olivia scored an approval rating of 89%, making it the most popular girl’s name of 2012 in this category. 35% of people thought the name Olivia was okay, while only 4% hated it.

(Picture shows old olive trees in Albania).

Celebrity Baby News: Darren and Tam Ng

21 Saturday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Basketball player Darren Ng, and his wife Tam, recently welcomed a son named Orlando.

Darren plays for the Adelaide 36ers in the NBL, and started his professional career with them in 2003. In 2008 he signed with the Singapore Slingers, and after the team folded, he returned to the 36ers in 2009. In a recent poll of NBL players, Darren was rated as the best shooter in the National Basketball League.

Darren is the oldest child of a practising Adelaide GP, and both his younger brothers have completed medical school. Darren decided to also pursue a career in medicine, and managed to juggle basketball with his studies. He graduated from the University of Adelaide with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS), and works as a resident doctor at the emergency department of the Royal Adelaide Hospital. Last year, Dr Ng admitted himself to the same hospital as a patient, and was diagnosed with pneumonia, later making a full recovery.

Yindi Tuppence: Birth Announcements from Adelaide (June)

20 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Eleni Rose and Alexia Matisse

Sibella Kim and Mila Jadelle

Toby Maxwell and Alex William

 

Girls

Adella Luna

Anika Amy Ireland

Antra Jana

Blythe Ruby Alice

Cahlia Francesca (Vincent, Jaiden)

Daisy Mabel (Billy, Isabel, Fred)

Edwina Charlotte (Taylor)

Eve Ruby

Gertie Ann (Fergus, Frank)

Harper Lee (Jalen)

Lily Napier Elizabeth Georgia

Lucilla Grace (Jayden, Darcy)

Mia Kiyomi (Samuel)

Poppy Alice

Rachael Anne Maria

Reilly Isabel (Campbell, Mitchell)

Sirra Bay

Sophie Anne Margaret (Alexandra)

Susanna Rose (Elizabeth)

Yindi Tuppence

 

Boys

Ajay Marthinus

Alfred Baxter Bear (Milly, Eliza, Ollie)

Armanbek (Aruzhan, Ariana)

Astin Elias (Payton, Xavier)

Banjo Scott (Kellie, Lilith, Tahlia)

Connall Patrick (Eoin)

Dan Ryan (Jack, Macey)

Hamish Eli

Henry Thomas John (Eliza)

Isaiah Jacob

Jimmy Keith Eugene (Jemma)

Jude William Luke (Amaiya)

Lucas James Dieter

Lennox Jude (Jake, Jett)

Makai Paul (Marley, Jameson)

Memphis Ethan

Paul Elio

Ramone Peter John (Levi, Molly)

Tarkis Nektarios

Valentino Pasquale

(Picture shows the McLaren Valley near Adelaide, where the Sea and Vines Festival takes place on the Queen’s Birthday long weekend in June)

Jagger Ocean: Birth Announcements from Hobart (June)

20 Friday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

4062924-3x2-940x627Twins

Amber Rae and Leah Cathryne

Charlie James and Asher Harry

 

Girls

Amelie Poppy (Charlotte)

Ariella Lacey (Jairon)

Audrey Victoria

Chiara Ann

Hailey Anne Louise

Imogen Grace

Isabella Nellie

Kelsie Jane (Ella)

Macy Cael (Eli)

Matilda Maree Rose (Shane, Lucas)

Maya Anne Elizabeth

 

Boys

Felix Petar James (Brayden, Arielle, Ruby, Huxley)

Henry Jack Christopher

Hunter Andrew James

Jagger Ocean (Jayde)

Jax Anthony Shane (Bailee)

Jensen Edward (Lucas)

Logan Anthony Kerry

Oliver Peter Ross

Orlando Ralphie (Paityn)

Rex Arthur (Angus, Poppy)

Vincent Paul Emmanuel

William McRae Alexander

(Picture shows the square dancing convention, held in Hobart on June 10 2012; photo from the ABC)

Celebrity Baby News: Mick and Angie Molloy

19 Thursday Jul 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Mick and Angie Molloy

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, twin sets

Comedian Mick Molloy, and his wife Angie, welcomed twin boys on July 10, and recently announced their sons’ names as Fred and Lenny. Fred and Lenny Molloy were born a month early at the Royal Women’s Hospital in Melbourne, and arrived the day before their dad’s 46th birthday. They are the first celebrity twins for 2012.

Before the names of the twins were announced, it was possible to place a bet on it at Sportsbet, with “Richo and Jack” being the favourites. It seemed that people were backing the Molloys to choose nicknames for their sons. After the births, Mick joked that the twins would be named “Ron and Jeremy” – an allusion to a joke at Triple M that adult film star Ron Jeremy is one of Mick’s celebrity doppelgangers.

Mick has been working in comedy since his university days, and while still a student met the comedy troupe The D-Generation, who have been so influential on the Australian comedy scene. As well as writing comedy for television, he became a regular on The D-Generation TV show in 1988. He was an essential part of The Late Show in the early 1990s, and then he and fellow cast member Tony Martin formed a highly successful comedy team on Austereo, with their Martin/Molloy radio show. He got his own TV show in 1999, The Mick Molloy Show; it bombed, but Mick bounced back and gained several acting roles in comedy movies and TV series, as well as hosting his own radio show on Triple M, Tough Love. He has had starring roles in the movies Crackerjack, Bad Eggs, and BoyTown, and since 2008 has been a regular panellist on the AFL show, Before the Game. Last year he returned to radio as a member of The Hot Breakfast on Triple M, as well as appearing each day on Triple M’s The Grill Team.

Mick has kept the identity of his wife Angie private, as she is not in the entertainment business, and it was only recently that the media reported her name. Mick and Angie have been together for about five years.

There are many comedians with the names Fred and Lenny, so they do seem very suitable for the sons of a comedian. However, they are also names gaining popularity, and Lenny in particular is a name I am seeing more and more often in birth announcements.

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