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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Monthly Archives: April 2015

Famous Names: Birdie and Melody

30 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

American slang terms, animal names, birth notices, celebrity sibsets, english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, historical records, middle names, name history, name meaning, name trends, names from television, nature names, nicknames, sporting terminology, surname names, UK name popularity, underused modern classics, US name popularity, vintage names, vocabulary names

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You do not need to be an ornithologist to see that there is something special about Australian birds, whether you are listening to the extraordinary calls of the lyrebird, seeing bright wrens and colourful fruit-eating pigeons, or enjoying the antics of our clever parrots. In fact, the very specialness of Australian wildlife led the great naturalist Charles Darwin to ponder the possibility of two Creators – one a steady sort of chap, turning out sparrows and bunnies, and the other a total nutter who made things like emus and kangaroos.

For most of the twentieth century, European and North American scientists assumed that birds evolved in the northern hemisphere, and that they had the “normal” birds. Australian birds broke a few of the rules, but they could be comfortably dismissed as second-hand fauna from a lost continent where all kinds of wacky things happened.

As the ABC science program Catalyst explained last month, it is only in recent decades that Australian scientists dared to challenge that orthodoxy. In the 1980s Australian scientists used DNA evidence to show that the world’s 4 500 species of songbirds – like the jays, thrushes, robins, and mockingbirds – were all descended from Australian songbirds. Far from being some crazy breakaway branch on the evolutionary tree, our birds were the originals.

This rocked the science world, which demanded evidence from the fossil record. Nobody had ever bothered to look for any fossils, but once an Australian scientist did, he found the bones of a tiny finch-like bird in Queensland in the 1990s. It was the earliest songbird ever found in the world by a staggering amount – at 54 million years old, it was at least 25 million years earlier than anywhere else.

More DNA evidence revealed that Australia was the ancestral home of the world’s pigeons and parrots as well, meaning that the majority of birds in the world have Australian ancestors, and that Australia was the most important continent for bird evolution. Australian birds did not break the rules of evolution – they made the rules!

For example, Charles Darwin proposed that birdsong evolved so that male birds could attract females with their beautiful voices. That never made sense in Australia, where in most species female birds also sing (and sometimes sing more than males). Before, Australia could be written off as a weird exception to the rule, but now we know that birdsong evolved on a continent where both female and male birds sing, so the old assumption cannot be true.

Birds have helped shape our continent for tens of millions of years, and our land has echoed with their songs, even during the many millions of years that the rest of the globe lay silent. But they have also shaped the entire world by filling it with the most intelligent and melodious of birds. In other words, there is only one Creator – and it’s the nutty southern hemisphere one.

BIRDIE
Birdie (or birdy) is a diminutive of the word bird, nearly always seen as affectionate and child-like; the word dates to the late 18th century. The word was associated with the days of early photography, when photographers would show a little metal bird to their subjects, and tell them to Watch the birdie to keep them focused. In golf terminology, a birdie means a score of one under par, and originated in New Jersey in 1899 – it’s from the American slang bird, referring to something excellent.

Birdie has been used as a personal name since the 19th century, but probably more commonly as a nickname than as a legal name. Mostly given as a name to girls, Birdie can be seen as a pet form of names such as Bertha, Bridget, Barbara, Elizabeth, or almost any name with a strong B sound. On Mad Men, Elizabeth “Betty” Draper was called Birdie by her husband as an affectionate nickname.

On the other hand, it is often given as a true nickname – that is, with no connection to the given name at all. An example is the British singer Birdy, whose real name is Jasmine van den Boegarde – her parents called her Birdy from the time she was a baby, because she opened her mouth to be fed like a little bird. These types of nicknames are not uncommon amongst the British aristocracy.

Birdie was used as a name more often in the United States than other countries, and it was on the US Top 1000 for girls almost continuously from 1880 to 1948, peaking in 1882 at #151, and not leaving the Top 500 until 1927. In 2013, 37 girls were named Birdie in the US, while Birdie has only charted once in the UK since 1996, when 3 baby girls were named Birdie in 2010 (data doesn’t take into account people with Birdie as their nickname).

There are quite a few women named Birdie in Australian historical records, mostly born in the late 19th and early 20th century. It can be found occasionally given to boys in the middle position, where it may come from the surname – the surname has nothing to do with birds, but is a corruption of the oath, Par dieu, French for, “by God”. I have recently seen a baby girl named Birdie in a birth notice, while a blog reader named her daughter Mabel last year, but calls her “Birdie” as her nickname.

Vintage nicknames like Buddy and Buster are back in vogue, and Birdie is a very stylish example of the trend. It manages to be cute, without being overtly flirty or sexy, and has a rather upper class feel. Definitely one to watch!

MELODY
A melody is a sequence of notes which makes a musical phrase or motif – what we might otherwise call a tune. The word is ultimately from the ancient Greek meloidia, meaning “singing, chanting”.

Melody has been used as a girl’s name since at least the 18th century, but became more common in the 19th. The name Melody first charted in Australia in the 1960s, debuting at #543. It is currently around the 200s. In the US, where it has charted since the 1940s, Melody is #171 and rising, while in the UK it is #261, and appears to be rising slightly.

Melody is a popular choice for singers, who either seem to have been inspired by the meaning of their name, or have adopted it as a stage name. American singer-songwriter Melody Gardot took up music as therapy after an accident, Melody Thornton is a member of the Pussycat Dolls, while young Australian country singer Melody Pool’s career is just starting out. Japanese pop singer Melody Ishiwara has sisters named Harmony, Rhythmy and Christine (rather in the style of sisters named Grace, Faith, Hope, and Michelle).

There have been several characters named Melody in recent popular culture, such as the daughter of Ariel and Eric in the sequel to The Little Mermaid, the cute ditzy drummer from Josie and the Pussycats, and Melody Pond, the mysterious time-traveller from Dr Who, who goes by the name River Song.

I’ve noticed that people often dismiss Melody as a “dated” name, because it shares a similar sound to Melanie and Melissa, which both peaked as popular names in the 1970s. However, a look at the data shows that this isn’t correct, and underlines the dangers of judging a less-common name based on how it sounds.

Melody is an underused modern classic which has never been higher than the 200s, and is higher now than it has ever been; overseas data suggests that it may even be rising slowly. It’s pretty and music-themed, fitting in well with the current trend for names such as Aria, Harmony, and Cadence, while still feeling like a traditional choice. It’s well worth considering if you are searching for a lyrical, contemporary name without any baggage that has been overlooked by most others.

POLL RESULTS
The name Birdie received an approval rating of 56%. 36% of people loved the name Birdie, and 22% thought it was a terrible name.

The name Melody received a lower approval rating of 48%. 45% weren’t too keen on the name Melody, and 15% loved it.

Information on songbird evolution from Catalyst’s episode Where Birdsong Began, shown March 10 2015, and based on the book Where Song Began, by Australian biologist Tim Low.

(Photo shows an adult male superb lyrebird, an astounding mimic; both males and females sing, but males are louder and more skilful).

Celebrity Baby News: Sporting Babies

28 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring

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AFL footballer Josh Kennedy, and his Colombian born wife Ana, recently welcomed their first child, and named their son Emilio John. Josh began his career with Hawthorn in 2008, and has been with the Sydney Swans since 2010. Josh is the son of John Kennedy Jr, who played for Hawthorn for 12 years, and the grandson of John Kennedy Sr, who played for Hawthorn in the 1950s, and had a distinguished coaching career; he is an inductee of the Australian Football Hall of Fame, and Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Emilio’s middle name seems to be in honour of these men.

Boxer Daniel Geale, and his wife Sheena, welcomed their fourth child on March 31 and named their daughter Harper [pictured]. If Harper had been a boy, her name would have been Emmett, but Daniel and Sheena weren’t completely sure about the name. Harper joins big brother Bailey, and big sisters Ariyelle and Lilyarna. Daniel has represented Australia at the Olympics, won gold at the Commonwealth Games, and is a three-time middle-weight world champion. Daniel is a descendant of Tasmania’s Palawa people, and Sheena is also of Indigenous descent.

Harness racing trainer Emma Stewart, and her partner Clayton Tonkin, welcomed their first child on March 8 and named their daughter Willow Ava. Emma and Clayton have been together for 11 years, and are extremely successful trainers at an elite level.

Celebrity Baby News: Giulia and Bernard Jones

27 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

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Liberal MLA Giulia Jones, and her husband, Major Bernard Jones, welcomed their fifth child on April 17 and have named their son Maximus. Maximus joins big brothers Felix, Leo, and Ambrose, and big sister Nicolina, who are all aged between 3 and 9.

Giulia is a member of the ACT Legislative Assembly, and has represented the seat of Molongolo for the Liberal Party since 2012. Before entering politics, she ran a small business, worked in the public service, and was a staffer to Sophie Mirabella, and Tony Abbot. Major Bernard Jones is an army engineer.

The Top 100 Baby Names in New South Wales for 2014

26 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name trends, popular names

GIRLS

  1. Olivia
  2. Mia
  3. Charlotte
  4. Amelia
  5. Ava
  6. Emily
  7. Chloe
  8. Ruby
  9. Isabella
  10. Sophie
  11. Grace
  12. Ella
  13. Isla
  14. Sophia
  15. Zoe
  16. Sienna
  17. Ivy
  18. Evie
  19. Scarlett
  20. Emma
  21. Lily
  22. Matilda
  23. Hannah
  24. Harper
  25. Zara
  26. Georgia
  27. Lucy
  28. Layla
  29. Abigail
  30. Annabelle
  31. Evelyn
  32. Eva
  33. Isabelle
  34. Jasmine
  35. Willow
  36. Sofia
  37. Audrey
  38. Maddison
  39. Imogen
  40. Jessica
  41. Aria
  42. Mila
  43. Maya
  44. Sarah
  45. Savannah
  46. Alexis
  47. Alice
  48. Stella
  49. Violet
  50. Poppy
  51. Elizabeth
  52. Ellie
  53. Chelsea
  54. Summer
  55. Anna
  56. Claire
  57. Bella
  58. Madison
  59. Victoria
  60. Phoebe
  61. Eloise
  62. Lola
  63. Piper
  64. Indiana
  65. Addison
  66. Holly
  67. Alyssa
  68. Lilly
  69. Eden
  70. Lara
  71. Madeleine
  72. Rose
  73. Ariana
  74. Aaliyah
  75. Paige
  76. Isabel
  77. Lillian
  78. Alexandra
  79. Hayley
  80. Elise
  81. Emilia
  82. Eleanor
  83. Olive
  84. Molly
  85. Eliza
  86. Madeline
  87. Lexi
  88. Penelope
  89. Hazel
  90. Amelie
  91. Harriet
  92. Mackenzie
  93. Jade
  94. Natalie
  95. Elsie
  96. Ayla
  97. Charlie
  98. Indie
  99. Frankie
  100. Samantha
BOYS

  1. Oliver
  2. William
  3. Noah
  4. Jack
  5. James
  6. Lucas
  7. Thomas
  8. Alexander
  9. Ethan
  10. Liam
  11. Max
  12. Jacob
  13. Cooper
  14. Isaac
  15. Lachlan
  16. Harrison
  17. Joshua
  18. Samuel
  19. Benjamin
  20. Mason
  21. Henry
  22. Charlie
  23. Ryan
  24. Jayden
  25. Daniel
  26. Oscar
  27. Harry
  28. Hunter
  29. Leo
  30. Xavier
  31. Elijah
  32. Sebastian
  33. Archie
  34. George
  35. Jackson
  36. Levi
  37. Logan
  38. Aiden
  39. Nicholas
  40. Flynn
  41. Riley
  42. Tyler
  43. Hugo
  44. Matthew
  45. Hudson
  46. Michael
  47. Edward
  48. Zachary
  49. Adam
  50. Joseph
  51. Patrick
  52. Dylan
  53. Nate
  54. Jake
  55. Jaxon
  56. Luke
  57. Kai
  58. Luca
  59. Archer
  60. Ashton
  61. Beau
  62. Jordan
  63. Eli
  64. Connor
  65. Marcus
  66. Ali
  67. Austin
  68. Finn
  69. Gabriel
  70. Lincoln
  71. Christian
  72. Jasper
  73. Nathan
  74. Blake
  75. Chase
  76. Braxton
  77. Louis
  78. Angus
  79. Dominic
  80. Muhammad
  81. Toby
  82. Hayden
  83. Caleb
  84. Bailey
  85. Hamish
  86. Felix
  87. Charles
  88. Anthony
  89. Owen
  90. Aaron
  91. Ryder
  92. David
  93. John
  94. Christopher
  95. Jesse
  96. Phoenix
  97. Darcy
  98. Jonathan
  99. Omar
  100. Maxwell

GIRLS

Biggest Risers
Aria (+25), Maya (+22), Elise (+21 at least), Eleanor (+19 at least), Ariana (+17 at least), Madeline (+17 at least), Lexi (+14 at least), Piper (+14), (Evelyn +13), Harriet (+12 at least)

Biggest Fallers
Mackenzie (-44), Caitlin (-23 at least), Mikayla (-19 at least), Samantha (-17), Eliza, Elsie, Lara and Madison (-16), Gabriella (-12 at least), Lilly (-11)

New
Elise, Eleanor, Madeline, Lexi, Hazel, Natalie, Charlie, Frankie

Gone
Caitlin, Mikayla, Gabriella, Skye, Leah, Daisy, Zahra

BOYS

Biggest Risers
Gabriel (+29), Jordan (+21), George (+20), Nate (+19), Hamish (+16 at least), Jasper (+15), Bailey, Dylan and Hugo (+13), Kai (+12)

Biggest Fallers
Braxton (-25), Christian (-19), Nathaniel (-17 at least), Jonathan (-18), Chase and Hayden (-15), Nathan (-14), Mitchell (-13 at least), Anthony and Caleb (-12)

New
Hamish, Phoenix, Omar, Maxwell

Gone
Nathaniel, Mitchell, Alex

Birdie and Kip

24 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

IMG_1715

Twins
Clover Maisie and Remy Joy
Rory Todd and Willow Clare

Girls
Amalia Anndie (Caden)
Annabelle Marilyn (Caitlyn, Tyler, Mikayla)
Avah Skye Debe (Clarissa, Danica)
Billie (Milay-May)
Birdie Beatrix
Charlotte Evelyn Rose
Edith Eliza (Sophie, Annabelle)
Elizabeth Chelvarani
Eriana Jocel
Frances Violet
Gabriela Sheila (Melania)
Hannah Susan Grace
Harlow (London)
Ivy Charlotte (Ned)
Josephine Isobel
Lainey Anne
Neave Olive
Nellie Elizabeth (Pippa)
Phoebe Kaye (Jaynie, Seb, Ella)
Zara Analise

Boys
Archie Flynn (Ruby, Lilly)
Blesses (Ever)
Eli Callan
Freddy Patrick
Heath Corey
Henry Ren
Hunter Glen
Jacob John William (Pip)
Jaxson Zander (Thomas, Tygah)
Jimmy Neale
Kip Alexander (Peggy)
Lachlan Charles Graham (Tristan, Ethan)
Leo Casper
Lexon Reave (Makai)
Oscar George
Rafferty James
Reed Maxwell David
Samuel Emidio (James)
Thomas Eldridge
Wade Trevor

(Picture shows pelicans sleeping on wooden posts in Noosa on the Sunshine Coast; photo from Just Me and My Shadow)

Name News: Bagging Out Bad Baby Names, Baby Boomers Bite the Dust, and Branding Your Baby

22 Wednesday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Names in the News

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

acronym names, Baby Center, baby name businesses, baby name etiquette, choosing baby names, dated names, Facebook, Instagram, rare names, Vimeo

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Lara Bingle and Sam Worthington’s son Rocket Zot recently got his name hammered in the press. Celebrity mum Chrissie Swan wouldn’t have approved of that, because she believes that nobody deserves to have their baby name rubbished. She had her children’s’ names, Kit and Peggy, criticised, so she knows how horrible it feels. However, even Chrissie draws the line somewhere, and for her it is demonic names. I’ve noticed nobody seems able to say, “All baby names are great”; everyone has a clause in fine print that says, “Except for these obviously terrible names that nobody in their right mind would consider”.

However, while Alissa Warren from Mamamia agrees that bagging out someone’s baby name after the baby is born is not on, she thinks it’s fine to do it before the baby is born (as a warning, I guess). Chrissie would not be on board with that, because her son’s name was called “a nothing name” before his birth, which has damaged her relationship with the friend who shared this pre-natal opinion. Lots of comments on the article, with nearly all of them saying that you can’t be rude about someone’s baby name before the baby is born either, or even if the name hasn’t been decided yet.

They weren’t quite criticised, but certain rare names chosen by Australian parents at Baby Center this year were mentioned on Scoopla. Boys names included Anthem, Basil, Denim, Falcon, Finnick, Guru, Judge, Patch, Ranger, Tiger, Viggo, Zealand, and Zeppelin, while unusual names for girls were Agape, Chia, Elowen, Holiday, Hyacinth, Lark, Neo, Nivea, Posey, Sparrow, Tempest, and Violina. Members voted Moody for boys and Yolo for girls (an acronym for You Only Live Once) as the most unusual names they had heard of.

Of course, people are always fiddling the numbers to “prove” how rare or how common a name is, sometimes with unconvincing results. The Daily Telegraph looked through the data, and found that names like Arya are more often used than “common” Australian names like Kylie and Sharon. Sharon is a common name for women in their fifties – not at all common for newborn babies. Surely no one is surprised to hear there are more new babies named Arya than Sharon?

Same with this article on baby boomer names which are supposedly “dying out”. There’s not many Bruces around, but the numbers have remained pretty stable for the past 15 years, which doesn’t spell death to me. Neil is holding its own, and Ian is a classic which is still in the 200s – not even close to needing palliative care. Sandra hasn’t disappeared from the charts just yet, and classic Helen has been stable for a decade and may even be on the rise. The article is quite right though that even the “dead” names could very well come back one day – one day people will be naming their babies after Great-Grandmother Judith, the same way Elsie and Ruby have been rediscovered.

If you yearn for your own unique baby name, and are dismayed to find that Finnick and Elowen aren’t as one-off as you’d hoped, a Swiss company will custom design you one, for a measly $40 000. They have 14 naming experts, 4 historians, 12 translators, and two trademark attorneys who will work for 100 hours to create a baby name list for you. All elements of the name will have a positive meaning, and they often combine words in a new order, or use vocabulary words that haven’t been used as names before. The trouble is that the company is called Erfolgswelle (it means “wave of success” in German), which doesn’t inspire confidence in their naming abilities.

You can also go the cheapie option, and crowd source your baby name, like north-coast NSW inventor Cedar and his partner Kylie did. Their baby came early, and he was a boy when they were expecting a girl, so they didn’t have any baby names planned. Cedar and his dad had already used crowd funding for their innovative bee hive, so naturally saw crowd sourcing the baby name as an extension. So far, the most popular baby name is Buzz.

And why does your baby need a unique baby name? So they can start building their personal brand, for we are assured that in the future there will be no such things as a CV, and employers will instead be making hiring decisions based on your personal website (preferably with its own .com) and social media strategies. Already nine year-old surfer Winter Vincent has his own Instagram, Facebook and Vimeo, and has attracted sponsors through his charity work and his “amazing name”. And Millie-Belle Diamond is only 14-months old but already earns up to $250 a post on Instagram flogging teeny-size fashion brands. Don’t Winter Vincent and Millie-Belle Diamond already sound like brand names? And they didn’t cost $40 000 or require a crowd to pitch in, so if you want an amazing name to brand your baby, you can do it yourself quite successfully.

(Photo of Millie-Belle Diamond from Instagram)

Celebrity Baby News: NRL Babies

21 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring, twin sets

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Jason Clark, and his wife Lauren, welcomed their daughter Andi on April 15, a sister for Milla [pictured]. Jason has been playing for the South Sydney Rabbitohs since 2009, and is an ambassador for the government’s Australian Apprenticeships scheme as a qualified carpenter.

George Rose, and his partner Shana Barney, recently welcomed their first child, and have named their son George after his father. It’s a family tradition, because George Rose senior is George Rose III, sharing his name with both his dad and grandfather. This season, George aptly signed with the St George Illawarra Dragons, and he joins team mate Mike Cooper in naming his son George. George has also been chosen for the Indigenous All Stars and an Indigenous Dreamtime team which played the New Zealand Maoris at the 2008 World Cup, as well as the Prime Ministers XIII. Shana is an Indigenous Australian model.

Brett Morris, and his partner Kate Milliken, recently welcomed their daughter Ellie, a sister for Emily, aged 3 and a half; Emily’s birth was featured on the blog. Brett plays for the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs, alongside his twin brother Josh.

Sam Thaiday, and his wife Rachel, recently welcomed their daughter Elsie, a sister for Gracie, aged 2; Gracie’s birth was featured on the blog. Sam plays for the Brisbane Broncos.

(George, Ellie, and Elsie’s births were announced on various sporting programs on TV).

Celebrity Baby News: Emma Lung and Henry Zalapa

21 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

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Actress Emma Lung, and her husband Henry Zalapa, welcomed their first child on Easter Sunday, April 5, and have named their son Marlowe.

Emma was in the short-lived drama series Cooks, and had her breakthrough role in the film Peaches, before starring in 48 Shades, Triangle, Cradlewood, and Crave. Emma was in an episode of American drama series Entourage, and currently in the Channel 10 drama, Wonderland.

Henry is a film director; he has made two short films, Submerged, and Deserted. Henry and Emma were married in Mexico in 2013.

Celebrity Baby News: Olympian Babies

20 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

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Athlete Jana Pittman recently welcomed her daughter Emily, a sister for Cornelis, aged 7; Cornelis is the son of Jana’s former husband, English athlete Chris Rawlinson. Emily was conceived via IVF using donor sperm. Jana had had two miscarriages, and had been diagnosed with a pre-cancerous condition of the cervix, so felt that this might be her only chance to give Cornelis a sibling – he chose the name Cora for his sister’s name, because it’s similar to his own.

Jana is a two-time world champion in the 400 metre hurdles, has won multiple gold medals at Commonwealth games, and is one of only nine atheletes to have won world championships at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletic event. She also competed in the bobsleigh event at the 2014 Winter Olympics, making her the first Australian female athlete to have competed at both the Summer and Winter Olympic games. Jana is currently training for the 2016 Olympics in Rio.

Ski-ier Lydia Lassila, and her husband, retired Finnish ski champ Lauri Lassila, welcomed their son Alek in February, a brother for Kai, who is nearly 4 [pictured]. They chose the name Alek because when he was born, his hands were so tightly clenched that the midwife could not uncurl them, so they wanted a name denoting strength, and “defender of men” seemed strong; they also wanted a name which worked in both English and Finnish. Lydia won gold in freestyle ski-ing at the 2010 Olympics, and bronze at the 2014 Olympics.

Waltzing With … Rosemary

19 Sunday Apr 2015

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

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Anzac Day names, celebrity baby names, Christmas names, famous namesakes, food names, holiday names, honouring, modern classics, name history, name meaning, name popularity, names from movies, names of herbs, nature names, plant names, portmanteau names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

gallipoli-rosemary-jim-molan

It will be Anzac Day this weekend, the centenary of the first Anzac landing at Gallipoli on April 25 1915. As well as services all over Australia and New Zealand, there will also be Anzac Day ceremonies in Turkey, and at Villers-Brettoneux in northern France.

The rosemary plant has long been connected with Anzac Day ceremonies, and it is traditional to wear a sprig in your coat lapel, pinned to your breast, or held in place by war medals. They are often sold by Legacy and the RSL. It is not known when this tradition first started, but it may date back to the very first Anzac Day commemoration in 1916.

According to the ancient Greeks, who drew on the work of Arabic physicians, rosemary improved the memory (students would wear it in their hair during exams), so it became associated with remembrance. Rosemary was thrown into graves or sprigs worn by mourners as a sign the departed person would never be forgotten (and to ward off the smell), and it’s famously referenced in Ophelia’s speech in Shakepeare’s Hamlet, where she says, “There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance”.

Interestingly, rosemary’s connection with memory is more than mere superstition, because modern science has found that inhaling rosemary oil does significantly enhance memory, and that even small doses of rosemary improve cognitive function in the elderly.

While the connection with rosemary and remembrance for the dead is one that goes back thousands of years, it takes on a particular significance for Anzac Day, because rosemary grows wild on the Gallipoli Peninsula. The scent of rosemary, whether it is pinned to your clothes, planted in a garden as a memorial, or sprinkled over a traditional Anzac Day lamb roast, is the perfect mark of remembrance and commemoration.

Lest we forget.

Name Information
Rosemary can be seen as a combination of the names Rose and Mary, or as a reference to the aromatic herb. The plant rosemary has nothing to do with roses, because its name comes from the Latin ros marinus, meaning “dew of the sea”. This is because it grows naturally in dry coastal Mediterranean climates.

According to legend, Aphrodite was draped in rosemary as she rose from the sea foam. Perhaps because of this, and the association with everlasting memory and fidelity, rosemary was associated with love in the Middle Ages, and it was traditional for brides to wear rosemary wreaths, and for guests to wear a sprig of rosemary at a wedding – even now it’s said that a bit of rosemary in the wedding bouquet brings the bride good luck.

There are many love superstitions involving rosemary in folklore, including the charming one that a newly married couple should plant a rosemary branch in their garden together: if the branch takes root and flourishes, it is a good omen for their wedded life.

There are Christian legends about rosemary too. One tells how the flowers of the rosemary plant were originally white; the Virgin Mary spread her blue cloak on the bush while she rested, and when she removed it, the flowers had miraculously turned blue as a reward for their humble service. Another legend says that she placed the linen from the baby Jesus to dry on the bush, and ever after the plant carried a fresh aroma, while a legend from Spain says that the Virgin Mary sheltered beneath a rosemary plant during the escape to Egypt. It is sometimes called Mary’s rose because of these stories.

Rosemary was one of the plants associated with Christmas. Being an evergreen plant, it was suitable for winter time decorations, and rosemary has a habit of being able to flower even in cold weather. Christmas hot wines and ales were sometimes flavoured with rosemary, which was considered salubrious as well as festive. Rosemary was also a popular New Year’s gift in times past.

Whether it was because of the connection to the Virgin Mary, or because rosemary has such a strong, healthy odour, it was also seen as a protective plant: according to folklore, by planting rosemary in the garden you were safe from witches, although in Sicily they say fairies will live in rosemary. It is said that rosemary will not grow in the garden of an evil person.

With such strong connections to female power, the superstition developed that if rosemary thrived in a garden, it was a sign that the wife of the house was the boss! As rosemary is hardy and easy to grow, you would need to be a very bad gardener for your rosemary to do poorly, but my husband still likes to teasingly point out our healthy rosemary plants as a sign of who rules the home. He’s only joking, but in the past, some men would rip the rosemary from the kitchen garden in an effort to control their wives.

Rosemary’s history is connected to royalty, because according to tradition, it was introduced to England in the 14th century by Joan of Valois, Countess of Hainault. She sent cuttings of it to her daughter, Queen Phillipa, the wife of Edward III, along with instructions on how to grow it, and information on its many benefits. Rosemary was probably brought by the Romans many centuries before, but Queen Phillipa may have re-introduced it, or at least given it a solid royal seal of approval.

Although Rosemary was used as a personal name as early as the 17th century, it didn’t become common until the 19th, when flower and plant names were fashionable. It seems to have been a particular favourite with Catholic families, no doubt in reference to the Virgin Mary.

Famous Rosemarys include Princess Rosemary of Salm-Salm, cabaret singer Rosemary Clooney, actress Rosemary Harris, and children’s author Rosemary Sutcliffe. Famous Australian Rosemarys include poet Rosemary Dobson, gardener Rosemary “Bea” Bligh, human rights activist Rosemary Gillespie, director Rosemary Blight (The Sapphires), nutritionist Rosemary Stanton, and paralympian Rosemary Little.

Rosemary first entered the charts in the 1920s, when it debuted at #220 – it may have been a celebrity baby name, for the tragic Rose Marie, called “Rosemary”, had recently been born to prominent Boston businessman Joseph P. Kennedy. By the following decade it was already in the Top 100. It peaked in the 1950s at #60, when Rosemary Clooney’s career began, and left the Top 100 by the 1970s (it went down rapidly after horror movie Rosemary’s Baby, and real life horror story Rosemary West).

After this, it sunk in popularity until the late 2000s, when it recovered slightly, and is now around the 400s. At present, it appears to be fairly stable. In the US, Rosemary has been almost continually in the Top 1000, and is now in the 500s and rising, while in the UK it has been steadily falling, and is now in the 700s.

Rosemary is a modern classic with a vintage vibe, and US data suggests it may become one of the 1950s names which becomes fashionable in the future. You may think of it as a name to honour a Rose and a Mary simultaneously, or even as a name suitable for a baby girl born around Anzac Day.

It doesn’t really have a sweet old-fashioned feel, for the herb rosemary gives it a tang. Its connection to weddings and Christmas helps it feel festive, while its association with mourning and funerals adds depth.

Rosemary is strong, clear-minded, clean, and healthy – as fresh as a sea breeze, as lusty as a goddess rising from the waves, as pretty as a bride, as practical as a housewife, as dignified as a queen, as dear as memory, and as solemn as the grave made sweet by her scent.

POLL RESULT
Rosemary received an excellent approval rating of 89%, making it one of the highest-rated names of 2015. 37% of people thought the name Rosemary was okay, and only 3% hated it.

(Photo of rosemary at Anzac Cove from Friends of Gallipoli)

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