Famous Names: Michael and Jane

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It’s been a satisfying summer of test cricket for Australia, as we convincingly trounced India in all four matches. One nice thing is that we played on January 26, which is not only Australia Day, but also Independence Day in India, so we shared our national days.

One of the highlights was team captain Michael Clarke scoring a triple hundred, modestly declaring on 329, just a few runs shy of Don Bradman’s top score of 334. It was the 100th test match to be played at the Sydney Cricket Ground, and Clarke’s score was both the highest ever in an Australia vs India test series, and the highest ever at the SCG. He followed up the triple century with a double century in Adelaide.

The name Michael is from Hebrew, and is translated as “who is like God?” – a rhetorical question with the obvious answer of “No-one is like God”. It is therefore a symbol of humility. In the Bible, Michael is an archangel, and very important in both Jewish and Christian traditions. In the Old Testament, he is said to be the protector of Israel, and in the New Testament Michael is the leader of the angelic hosts who defeat Satan in a war in Heaven. Michael is also mentioned in the Koran.

Michael is venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox faiths; he is a patron of the military and also the sick and suffering. Some Protestant denominations believe he is identical with either Jesus or Adam. He has made a number of apparitions, including, according to legend, at St Michael’s Mount in Cornwall, and Mont Saint Michel in Normandy.

Michael has long been popular in Ireland (it’s currently #12 there), and considered to be a typically Catholic name – so much so that Mick is disparaging slang for a Roman Catholic of Irish descent.  We also say taking the Mickey or taking the mick, which is Cockney rhyming slang from “Mickey Bliss” ie “taking the piss” (to tease or mock).

Michael is a classic name which has never been out of the Top 100. It was #44 in the 1900s, reached its lowest point in the 1920s at #66, peaked in the 1970s at #1, and is currently #38.

Unbelievably, as Michael Clarke hit his record-breaking triple century, he had no sponsorship on his bat, having just been dumped by a cash-strapped Dunlop Slazenger. The only markings on his bat were promotional stickers for Jane McGrath Day, or Pink Stumps Day.

Jane McGrath was the first wife of former cricket player Glenn McGrath; an English air hostess prior to marriage, she became an Australian citizen on Australia Day 2002. That was the same year she and Glenn founded the McGrath Foundation to raise money for breast cancer. She died in 2008 after battling breast cancer for more than a decade; she was 42 years old.

The McGrath Foundation has raised more than $12 million, and the third day of the first test match at the SCG each year is Jane McGrath Day. The stands are filled with tens of thousands of fans wearing pink to show their support, many guys sporting Real Men Wear Pink signs, and over a million dollars is expected to be raised by cricket clubs.

Jane is a feminine form of John, an Anglicisation of Old French Jehanne. Although in use since the Middle Ages, it only became the standard form in the 17th century after being taken up by the aristocracy; until then, Joan was the more common name. Plain Jane is 20th century slang for an average or ordinary looking woman, which must have irritated many a Jane over the years.

Jane peaked in the 1960s at #33, was out of the Top 100 by the 1990s, and quite recently dropped off the rankings altogether. Its real success is probably as a middle name.

Note: Michael Clarke later gained sponsorship by a little-known sporting goods company from Wollongong named Spartan.

Celebrity Baby News: Michael and Melissa Sell

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Melbourne horse trainer Mick Sell, and his wife Mel, welcomed their third child in unusual circumstances. Their daughter Louise Maree was born around 5 pm on January 14, beside the Tullamarine Freeway, underneath the Melbourne Zoo exit sign. As with similar stories seen on the blog, Melissa was heading off to the Royal Women’s Hospital to give birth, when Louise insisted on being born there and then. She was delivered with the help of Melissa’s friend Julie, and the paramedics. Louise Sell joins siblings Sarah, 8, and Joe, 5.

Mick trains 20 horses not far from the Kyneton track. On Australia Day, he took five horses to a race meeting at Kyneton, which had been transferred from Hanging Rock. All five of his horses won their races that day, an unbelievable result which made Mick think that baby Louise was his lucky charm. Mel says a few people have offered to buy their daughter since then. The winning horses were Cashzoo, Vopop, Dance Crew, Whiskey Fur, and Enchanting Waters, which won the Hanging Rock Cup.

Just a few days earlier, Mick’s dad Ron, part-owner of Enchanting Waters, had been diagnosed with cancer, and Enchanting Waters’ breeder Maurie Bloom, died last Christmas Eve. Mick says that the day put a smile on people’s faces who needed cheering up. He was able to visit Ron in hospital and present him with two gifts: the Hanging Rock Cup, and his new grand-daughter.

(Story and photo from the Herald Sun, February 1 2012; photo shows the entire Sell family with Enchanting Waters. Headline incorrectly identifies Louise as Mick’s son).

Georgia Blue and Gunner Phoenix: Birth Announcements from the Adelaide “Advertiser” (January)

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Twins

Ashleigh Nancy and Amelia Tegan

Caitlin Jane and Estelle Helen (Kendall, Tamika, Ella)

Henry and Oliver

Isobel Rose and Eliza Mae (Henry)

Tate Lachlan and Kenzie Violet

 

Girls

Alejandra Soraya

Allegra Grace

Amelia Natalie Grace

Arabella Eve

Armani Harper

Asja Sky (Ayden)

Dakota Willow (Matthew, Daniel, Kayla, Jesse, Kiana, Montana, Tyler, Indiana)

Dayna Tanisha (Marlie)

Ebony Michelle (Reuben)

Emma Lillemor

Esther Margaret May (Molly)

Georgie Blue (Tiffany, Marcus)

Isabella Judith Grace (Samson, Fergus)

Lindsay Jaye Cynthia (Patrick)

Madeleine Jean May

Mearah Jean (Dek, Tiahna, Cianna)

Mia Isobel Elizabeth

Molly Violet (Luca)

Oakley Sienna (Lochie, Amity)

Pearl Maria

Peggy Mignonne

Penelope Jane

Sienna Audrey Jean (Mackenzie, Dana, Georgia, Hunter)

Tara Nyolie

Zoe Chevelle (Seth)

 

Boys

Ashwin Ramdhanny

Bede Douglas Ricky (Reef)

Bodhi Glen (Noah, Levi)

Brock Pierre

Charlton Robert

Connor Chad Andrew (Archie, Elliot)

Cormac Jenson

Dane Archer

Dante Sergio

Eddie Clayton George

George Augustine Stanley (Allegria)

Gunner Phoenix

Harper William (Izzy)

Harry Hugo

Houston Owen

Hudson Ivon Maxwell

Isaac Benjamin Angus (Oliver, Eli)

James Richard Gregory (Thomas, Hayley, Ella)

Jeremiah Alistair

John Constantine (Loukia)

Kip Angus (Spencer, Neeve, Jonte, Banjo, Fergus)

Milton John Brittell

Oakley David

Rafferty Claude (Oscar)

Tykhai Nate

 

Sadie and Larry: Birth Announcements from the “Sydney Morning Herald” (January)

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Girls

Beatrix Mary (Poppy, Harry)

Chloe London

Eva Lorraine

Francesca Lily (Jonah, Raphael)

Imogen Claire (Mia, Leith)

Ivy Joy (Archie)

Monique Lauren

Sadie Willow (Lola, Billy)

Zoe Matilda Claire (Fin)

 

Boys

Ashton Flynn

Byran Kent (Alexander, Benjamin, Douglas)

Edward Graham (Bill, Paddy)

Jack Istvann

Harrison William (Liam, James)

Hugh Antony Patrick (Phoebe, Sasha)

Joshua Alexander

Larry William

Samuel James

Famous Name: Bob

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Last Sunday, Father Bob Maguire said his final mass at the church of Sts Peter and Paul’s in South Melbourne. At the age of 77, after nearly 40 years of service, he was forced to leave by the Catholic Church, which quotes canon law stating the official retirement age for priests is 75. He and his black standard poodle, Franklin, are temporarily homeless. At 77, Barry Humphries is awarded UK Australian of the Year; at the same age, Father Bob gets the boot.

Father Bob Maguire is one of the most famous and popular Catholic priests in Australia, and has devoted his life to helping others. His compassion, mischievous humour, bluntness, and eccentricities have made him loved by people from all religions, and none.

He has founded four charities, now amalgamated into the Father Bob Maguire Foundation, and inspired by a revolutionary approach to social justice. The Foundation’s workers are called The Bob Squad, and they care for the poor, the destitute, the homeless, and the mentally ill. Their catch cry is Viva la Bob!

Father has received an Order of Australia, and last year was named Victorian of the Year. Everyone thinks he’s super, except, apparently, the Catholic Church. Despite his massive popularity, Bob believes that the powers that be in the church hierarchy find him too much of a headache, because he has an unconventional approach to parish life which had him branded a maverick.

Some reasons the Church may have felt teased by Father Bob:

  • He put up a memorial on the parish front lawn to people who had died from drugs
  • He didn’t lock the church, because no matter how much stuff got stolen, he wanted it to be always available
  • People with mental illness or social problems were welcomed to church services
  • The collection plate was taken up by kids on roller skates
  • He gave the Occupy Melbourne protesters sanctuary
  • He said he would be happy to perform gay marriages in the church if that was legal
  • He publicly disagreed with the church’s ruling that secular songs not be permitted at Catholic funerals
  • Last year as an April Fool’s Day joke, he claimed that his church would be instituting “drive through confessionals” in order to keep pace with modern life
  • He has co-hosted a non-denominational religious TV programme with slightly controversial Jewish comedian John Safran
  • He finds parallel universes much more interesting to think about than life after death
  • When asked what Jesus might do if he were alive today, he quipped, “Get back in the tomb”

More than 1000 people attended Father Bob’s last mass, and many of them will not come to church again, because only Father Bob could make sense of it all for them. However, although he no longer has a church, he sees his Foundation as a “parish without borders”, and is also reaching people through his website, blog, Twitter, and his weekly radio spot on youth radio station Triple J.

I don’t presume to the theological qualifications which can judge whether Father Bob is a good Christian or not, but I do know he is a great Australian. And that (for the purposes of this blog) is more important.

Bob is a pet form of the name Robert, meaning “bright fame”. The old-fashioned nicknames for Robert were Hob, Dob and Nob, and Bob is a continuation of this trend to rhyme a name with others.

Bob is not only a palindrome, but also a vocabulary word. To bob means to “to move up and down”; it’s also the name for a short haircut, and pre-decimal slang for “a shilling” – a word still used by many older folk.

It’s well on trend as part of the vogue for 1930s nicknames, such as Bill, Joe, Sid, Dan and Jim. Knowing they will never call their child by a full form of the name, and loath to saddle them for life with a cutesy name like Billy, Joey or Danny, parents are opting for the simple monosyllabic nickname as an unpretentious choice.

As a middle name, Bob has even been used on a celebrity baby – name-fussy radio host Hayley Pearson called her son Austin Bob.

Celebrity Baby News: Adam and Haylea Cooney

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AFL star Adam Cooney, and his wife Haylea, welcomed their daughter Evie Danielle on January 28. Evie joins siblings Ashlea and Jaxon.

Adam has played for the Western Bulldogs in Perth since 2004, and in 2008 won the Brownlow Medal. Adam and Haylea were married in 2009 – he famously proposed by putting a Burger Ring on her finger. At the wedding ceremony, he presented her with another Burger Ring, but this time he ate it.

(Story and baby photo from The Advertiser, Janury 31).

Top 50 Names for Girls and Boys in Western Australia for 2011

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GIRLS

  1. Ella and Mia
  2. Isabella
  3. Ruby
  4. Charlotte
  5. Chloe and Olivia
  6. Sophie
  7. Emily
  8. Ava and Sienna
  9. Amelia
  10. Lily
  11. Grace
  12. Isla
  13. Lucy
  14. Zoe
  15. Hannah
  16. Matilda
  17. Jessica
  18. Summer
  19. Emma
  20. Hayley
  21. Abigail
  22. Sophia
  23. Eva
  24. Jasmine
  25. Stella
  26. Lilly and Scarlett
  27. Georgia
  28. Evie
  29. Holly
  30. Maddison and Madison
  31. Imogen
  32. Isabelle
  33. Alexis
  34. Layla
  35. Molly
  36. Paige
  37. Amber
  38. Bella
  39. Savannah and Zara
  40. Chelsea
  41. Addison and Mikayla
  42. Alice
  43. Sarah and Sofia
  44. Elizabeth, Harper, Jade and Tahlia
  45. Kayla
  46. Indiana and Mackenzie
  47. Alyssa
  48. Amy and Maya
  49. Poppy
  50. Ellie

BOYS

  1. Ethan
  2. James
  3. Jack
  4. Lucas
  5. Oliver
  6. Joshua
  7. Thomas
  8. Cooper
  9. Jacob
  10. Riley
  11. Noah
  12. William
  13. Liam
  14. Xavier
  15. Lachlan
  16. Benjamin
  17. Samuel
  18. Max
  19. Levi
  20. Alexander and Tyler
  21. Mason
  22. Jake
  23. Daniel
  24. Jaxon
  25. Charlie
  26. Logan
  27. Harrison and Jayden
  28. Blake
  29. Luke
  30. Matthew
  31. Oscar
  32. Aiden and Harry
  33. Dylan and Mitchell
  34. Connor and Ryan
  35. Chase
  36. Kai
  37. Michael
  38. Caleb and Seth
  39. Flynn and Jackson
  40. Nate
  41. Isaac
  42. Eli, Hayden, Jordan, Sebastian and Zachary
  43. Cameron
  44. Henry, Joseph, Marcus and Nathan
  45. Callum
  46. Nicholas
  47. Hunter
  48. Beau and Elijah
  49. Hamish, Patrick and Zac
  50. Jesse, Taj and Tyson

Waltzing with … Skyler

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This post was first published on January 29 2012, and heavily revised on February 10 2016.

Tomorrow school goes back in three different states and territories (Queensland has already been back a week), which means that the summer holidays are drawing to a close. I chose this name as suitable for the start of term, thanks to its educational meaning.

Name Information
Skyler is a variant of Schuyler; a Dutch surname of German origin meaning “scholar”, said SKIE-luh. This name was brought to what is now the United States by Dutch colonists, who settled in the east during the 17th century.

The Schuylers were a prominent New York family. Pieter Schuyler was the first mayor of Albany in New York, and a commander of the British forces at the Battle of La Prairie, near Montreal. His descendants were numerous and distinguished, including his grand-nephew Philip Schuyler, who was a general in the American Revolution and Senator for the state of New York. It is said that the first use of the names Schuyler and Skyler was in honour of this family.

Schuyler has only appeared on the US Top 1000 a smattering of times. It shows up first at the beginning of the twentieth century, and then again between the mid 1980s and mid 1990s, only charting as a male name, and never getting higher than the bottom of the Top 1000. Currently Schuyler is almost equally given to both sexes in the US – 17 girls and 15 boys last year.

Famous people with the name include Schuyler Colefax, the 17th US Vice-President, who was a distant cousin of Philip Schuyler, and Schuyler Wheeler, inventor of the electric fan. Schuyler has been chosen as a baby name by actors Michael J. Fox and Sissy Spacek – both times for daughters. The name is barely used outside the United States, and pronunciation would be a puzzle to most.

During the 1940s and 1950s there was a popular American radio and television series called Sky King, about an Arizona rancher and pilot called Schuyler “Sky” King. During the 1950s, the spelling variant Skyler begins showing up in the data. It’s tempting to imagine that people tuned into the show, and began spelling the name as it sounded, or in such a way as to make the nickname Sky more obvious.

Skyler joined the US Top 1000 in 1981 for boys, and for girls in 1990 – it began showing up in data as a girls name in the late 1970s, so it had a brisk rise as a girls name. Skyler peaked for boys in 1996 at #217, and is currently #351. For girls, it peaked in 2000 at #250, and is currently #302.

Famous Skylers include Skyler Green, a footballer who played for the Dallas Cowboys in the NFL, and actress Skyler Samuels, who played Gigi on Wizards of Waverley Place. A fictional Skyler is Skyler White from the TV series Breaking Bad, played by Anna Gunn. Fashion stylist Rachel Zoe has a son named Skyler.

In the UK, Skyler has charted for boys and girls since the late 1990s. Currently it is #406 for girls, while in 2014, there were 13 boys named Skyler. It is rising rapidly for both sexes.

Rising alongside Skyler is the variant Skylar. While it has never been higher for boys in the US than the 300s, and is currently #635, it is Top 100 for girls, being #48 and rising. A famous namesake is American singer and songwriter Skylar Grey, born Holly Hafermann – her stage name a reference to mysterious “grey skies”.

In the UK, Skylar is #212 for girls and rising steeply. It is occasionally used for boys, and in 2014 there were 5 baby boys named Skylar.

There are also spelling variants of Skyler/Skylar which are specifically feminine. Skyla is #531 in the US, #156 and rising in the UK, and in 2012 made the Top 100 in New Zealand. It is much more popular than Skylah, but that is rising rapidly as well.

Skyla and Skylah are much more common in Australia than any other spellings of Skyler, and the numbers in the UK and New Zealand suggest that this spelling makes the most sense for someone with a British/Commonwealth accent. I estimate that if Skyla and Skylah were added together, the name would be in the Australian Top 100 by now, or very close to it, while other spelling variants are extremely rare for either sex.

You can see that if all the different spellings of Skyler were added up, it would be an extremely common name in the English speaking world. So Skyla or Skylah may not be an original choice for girl, but a boy named Skyler would stand out in Australia. Some of the other spelling variants would be worth considering, although I think Schuyler will cause more problems than it is worth.

By now this name has become almost completely divorced from its true meaning, and we now connect it with such things as clear or cloudy skies, free-wheeling flight, and the wild blue yonder. The obvious nicknames are Sky and Skye, and it fits in with names like Shyla, Myla, Kayla, Kai, and Tyler. Its sound is at least part of the reason for its success.

POLL RESULTS
As a girl’s name Skyler received an approval rating of 52%. 38% of people thought it seemed okay, although only 5% of people actually loved it.

Skyler had a lower approval rating as a boy’s name, at 46%. 28% disliked Skyler on a boy, and only 4% loved it.

The favoured spelling of the name was Skyler, with 37% of the vote, although Schuyler was not far behind on 33%. The least popular was Skyla, which only one person voted for.

(Photo is of the NSW Schoolhouse Museum of Education in Sydney)

Famous Name: Edna

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Each year on Australia Day, an Australian of the Year is chosen from amongst our highest achievers. The United Kingdom also chooses its own Australian of the Year, and we seem to send them so many people that there are plenty to choose from.

This year the winner was Barry Humphries, who, at the age of 77, accepted his award with the words, “It’s about time, really”.

Barry Humphries has created many comedy characters: vulgar Sir Les Patterson; gentle Sandy Stone; underground film-maker Martin Agrippa; sleazy trade unionist Lance Boyle; and failed tycoon Owen Steele, amongst others. But the most famous and successful is Dame Edna Everage.

Edna began in the 1950s as the average Melbourne housewife, and if she had stayed that way, would soon have become as quaint and irrelevant as a comic char or a music hall “turn”. The genius of Dame Edna is that she has continued to re-invent and update herself, whilst never losing the integrity of the character or even the back-story which accompanies her.

From her humble beginnings, she has evolved into a glamorous Gigastar, icon and diva in an ever-more extravagant wardrobe , while retaining the trademark wisteria-coloured hair, cats-eye spectacles, bunches of gladioli and cheery “Hello, possums!” greeting.

I feel her evolution owes a certain debt to Lady Thatcher at the the height of the powers – in particular the almost limitless self-confidence and meaningless charm, combined with an iron determination to remain “nice”.

Edna is a vehicle for Humphries to utilise his powers of satire against the cult of celebrity and modern vapidity, but also to make sly jests at the expense of his friends, and take gentle stabs at his enemies; sometimes, perhaps, even to slip in his real opinions on issues that he only dares to offer in the guise of Edna. As a result, you are never quite sure what Edna will say, and this glittering unpredictability is part of her fascination. It goes without saying that many of her sharpest barbs are aimed accurately at Australia.

Barry Humphries called his creation Edna after his childhood nanny, and Everage of course is the word average said in an Australian accent (or at least an Australian accent of the 1950s). Edna peaked in the 1910s in Australia, so in the 1950s she was supposed to be middle-aged, although by now the name sounds elderly – in fact, Edna must be nearing a century by now.

Edna is the name of several women in the Biblical apocrypha, including the wife of Methusaleh. It’s a Hebrew name translated as “pleasure”, and some believe the name for Eden comes from the same source, as if it was one of the “pleasure gardens” of the ancient Middle East.

However, in Ireland it has been used to Anglicise the name Edana; St Edana is an obscure saint from the west of Ireland. She may be linked to or named after a goddess called Eadaoin (AY-deen), and although it’s not at all certain, this name may be a feminine linguistic relative of Aidan.

In Australia, the Edana connection is far more likely as a source for Edna, as obscure Irish names are more common here than obscure Biblical ones.

Call me crazy, but I think if it wasn’t for La Grand Dame, Edna could be coming into vogue now, as others from her era have. It’s not too different from Edith, Edie and Eden, which are getting quite fashionable, it may be related to popular Aidan, and could ride on the back of Ed- male names, such as Edward and Eddie.

I won’t try to suggest Edna, but could I interest anyone in an Edana?

Celebrity Baby News: Cadel Evans and Chiara Passerini

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Champion cyclist, Cadel Evans, and his wife, Chiara Passerini, welcomed their first child last month. After two years of trying to adopt, last month they were awarded custody of a fifteen month old baby boy named Robel. Robel had been abandoned in the streets of Shashamane in Ethiopia at the age of six months.

Cadel was the first Famous Name on the blog, after winning the 2011 Tour de France. Since then, he has become a sporting hero and a household name in Australia. Chiara is originally from Italy, and is a pianist, gospel choir singer and music teacher. Cadel and Chiara live in the Swiss village of Stabio, near the Italian border; they also have a home in Australia outside Melbourne. They were married in Italy in 2005.

Robel is a common Ethiopian name. I have seen it translated as meaning “my joy”, but also used as an Amharic form of the name Reuben.

(Story and photos from the Sydney Morning Herald, January 28 2012)