Top 100 Baby Boy Names in Victoria for 2011

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1 Jack 470

2 William 461

3 Oliver 454

4 Ethan 445

5 Noah 390

6 Thomas 385

7 James 380

8 Lucas 365

9 Joshua 347

10 Lachlan 341

11 Cooper 317

11 Liam 317

13 Xavier 304

14 Max 292

15 Benjamin 289

16 Samuel 279

17 Alexander 273

18 Charlie 270

19 Harry 260

20 Oscar 241

21 Jacob 230

22 Riley 216

23 Mason 213

24 Ryan 207

25 Henry 200

26 Daniel 198

27 Jake 192

27 Tyler 192

29 Harrison 186

30 Jackson 170

31 Levi 168

32 Nicholas 166

33 Jayden 164

33 Luke 164

35 Sebastian 162

36 Isaac 157

37 Archie 156

37 Blake 156

39 Aiden 154

40 Nathan 143

41 Angus 141

41 Zachary 141

43 Matthew 140

44 Logan 139

45 Patrick 137

46 Michael 132

47 Hamish 131

48 Hunter 130

49 Edward 129

50 Leo 123

51 Jordan 122

52 Dylan 120

53 Flynn 119

53 Ryder 119

55 Adam 115

55 Connor 115

57 Archer 110

57 Finn 110

57 Mitchell 110

60 Elijah 107

60 Jasper 107

60 Luca 107

63 Marcus 105

64 Hayden 104

65 Zac 103

66 Christian 102

66 Harvey 102

68 Joseph 99

68 Owen 99

70 Hudson 97

71 Chase 95

71 Eli 95

73 Bailey 94

74 Jesse 91

75 Darcy 90

75 George 90

77 Caleb 89

78 Ashton 88

78 Kai 88

80 Aaron 85

80 Nate 85

82 Charles 84

83 Declan 81

83 Gabriel 81

83 Jett 81

86 Aidan 78

86 Austin 78

86 Jonathan 78

89 Hugo 76

89 Jaxon 76

89 Seth 76

92 Sam 75

93 Alex 74

93 David 74

93 Louis 74

96 Anthony 73

96 Lewis 73

98 Andrew 72

99 Beau 70

100 Callum 69

Source: Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages

Top 100 Baby Girl Names in Victoria for 2011

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1 Mia 428

2 Ruby 406

3 Olivia 404

4 Chloe 392

5 Charlotte 381

6 Isabella 359

7 Sienna 355

8 Amelia 352

9 Ella 339

10 Lily 334

11 Sophie 321

12 Ava 318

12 Emily 318

14 Grace 296

15 Zoe 280

16 Matilda 220

17 Lucy 194

18 Georgia 174

19 Scarlett 166

20 Hannah 165

21 Zara 156

22 Emma 155

23 Isla 153

24 Evie 151

25 Jessica 151

26 Isabelle 138

27 Eva 136

27 Ivy 136

29 Maya 134

30 Abigail 132

30 Jasmine 132

30 Madison 132

33 Holly 125

33 Sarah 125

35 Milla 122

36 Alice 115

37 Alexis 112

38 Chelsea 109

39 Sophia 108

39 Willow 108

41 Stella 103

42 Audrey 102

43 Maddison 99

44 Lilly 94

45 Poppy 95

46 Isabel 96

47 Summer 97

48 Anna 85

48 Layla 85

50 Annabelle 83

50 Imogen 83

50 Violet 83

53 Eliza 82

54 Addison 81

54 Claire 81

56 Alyssa 80

56 Lola 80

58 Alexandra 79

58 Elizabeth 79

61 Charli 78

61 Molly 78

63 Ellie 77

64 Amelie 74

64 Hayley 74

66 Mila 73

67 Lara 72

67 Mikayla 72

67 Phoebe 72

67 Tahlia 72

71 Eve 71

71 Madeleine 71

73 Alana 69

73 Paige 69

75 Piper 67

75 Samantha 67

77 Caitlin 65

78 Abbey 64

78 Heidi 64

78 Indiana 64

78 Mackenzie 64

82 Olive 62

82 Savannah 62

84 Victoria 61

85 Gemma 60

85 Leah 60

85 Sofia 60

88 Amy 59

88 Bella 59

88 Evelyn 59

88 Madeline 59

92 Amber 58

92 Rose 58

94 Stephanie 56

95 Jade 53

96 Charlie 52

96 Eden 52

98 Abby 51

98 Angelina 51

98 Daisy 51

Source: Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages

Famous Names: Tully and Yasi

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This blog entry was first posted on January 7 2012, and revised and republished on August 31 2016.

TULLY
On January 3, the town of Tully in Queensland celebrated the upgrade of its famous Golden Gumboot, which was damaged by Cyclone Yasi nearly a year ago. The tourist attraction is a 7.9 metre (26 feet) high gumboot, painted gold, built to commemorate the town’s 1950 highest recorded annual rainfall level of 7.9 metres (310 inches), earning Tully the distinction of being Australia’s wettest town.

When the Golden Gumboot was re-opened, it had received a fresh coat of paint and a new viewing platform. Fittingly, it rained heavily throughout the ceremony.

The town of Tully is named after the nearby Tully River, which received its name from Surveyor-General William Alcock Tully. William Tully was originally from Dublin, and arrived in Hobart as religious instructor on a convict ship in 1850 before embarking on a career of conscientious public service.

Tully is an Anglicised form of an Irish surname, originally MacTully, and having a host of variants, which is often derived from tuile, the Gaelic word for “flood”. Another theory is that it has been mistranslated from toile, meaning “will” (as in the will to keep going). However, some Tullys are so convinced of the first interpretation that they have hyper-Anglicised their surname to Flood.

The meaning of “flood” is very appropriate for the name of a river, and a town famous for its sogginess. In Game of Thrones, the Tully family is one of the Great Houses and as it is the principal house in the Riverlands and their ancestral home is Riverrun, perhaps George R.R. Martin also had the Irish surname and meaning in mind.

Tully has been used as a personal name since the late 18th century. Although the name can be found in early records from Ireland, it seems to have been more frequently used in the United States.

One inspiration for it may have been the Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, who wrote patriotic pamphlets under the pen name Tully – in his case, a reference to the Roman philosopher Marcus Tullius Cicero, whose name was occasionally Anglicised to Tully. The Tullia took their surname from the legendary Roman king Servius Tullius; the name is so ancient we do not know its meaning.

Tully has never been a common name. Last year in the US there were 8 boys named Tully with no girls listed with the name since 2013. In the UK the name has been in sporadic use, and in 2014 there were 4 baby boys named Tully. No girls are listed as having been given the name since 2009.

In Australia I have seen a roughly equal number of boys and girls with this name, and the name may be more evenly unisex here than elsewhere. One boost to the name for girls is women’s basketball champion Tully Bevilaqua, and after the attractive but controversial Tully Smyth competed on Big Brother in 2013, I heard many Australian parents refer to Tully as a “girl’s name”. Perhaps more importantly, it fits with the Australian trend for female names with a T-L pattern, such as Talia, Tilly, and Tallina.

YASI
The town of Tully was one of the worst affected by Cyclone Yasi, which hit the coast of northern Queensland early in the morning on February 3 2011. The town suffered extensive damage to its main street, and the area’s banana crops were completely flattened. Because Cyclone Yasi originated in Fiji, it was a Fijian cyclone forecaster called Misaeli Funaki who chose its name.

If you think naming a baby is difficult, spare a thought for the meteorologists who name cyclones. The cyclone had to start with Y, and nobody could think of an appropriate name for either gender.

So Mr Funaki suggested Yasi, which is the Fijian word for “sandalwood”. It didn’t have a history as a personal name in Fiji, but with no other candidates, his nomination was accepted by the ruling UN body. And so a new name was created.

Sandalwood is a tree with fragrant wood native to Asia and the Pacific. Australia has a sandalwood industry; the tree’s oil is used to make incense, soaps and cosmetics. Its antibacterial properties make it excellent as a skin cleanser, and Australian Aborigines eat its fruit as a bush food. Sandalwood is also used in the rituals of several eastern religions.

Yasi is neither used for boys or girls in Fiji. The cyclone forecasters were looking for a male name when they chose it, but they often resort to unisex names, and probably meant Yasi to be one. It’s commonly said to rhyme with Darcy, but seems to be more correctly pronounced YAH-zee.

During Cyclone Yasi, one doctor was apparently very keen for all babies born during the cyclone to be named Yasi, but there is no record of anyone following his advice. However you can find people around the world with the name Yasi, mostly female – perhaps a short form of names such Yasmin.

These are two short unisex names important to Australia’s history, especially connected with Queensland, rain, and storms. Tully is uncommon, but not unheard of, while Yasi is a true rarity, but not unusable.

POLL RESULTS
Tully received a very good approval rating of 70%. 46% of people thought it was a good name, while not one person hated it. Yasi was far less popular, with an approval rating of 22%. 53% of people weren’t keen on the name, and only one person loved it.

(Photo shows the Golden Gumboot in Tully, Queensland)

 

Final Round-Up of Celebrity Babies of 2011

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These are all the celebrity babies who missed out on being included on the blog last year (some were born before the blog existed).

Reporter and author Nick Bryant, and his wife, fashion designer Fleur Wood, welcomed their first child, Billy, in late 2010, but his birth wasn’t announced until last year. Nick was for several years the BBC’s foreign correspondent to Australia, and is now a roving reporter for that corporation. Fleur is one of Australia’s leading fashion designers, and has stores all around Australia.

Sports writer for the Coffs Coast Advocate, Brad Greenshields, welcomed his son Samuel Thomas at the start of the year (info from Twitter).

Notorious criminal Brett Maston, and his wife Rissa, welcomed their first child, Brett Junior Ronald, early in 2011. A bank robber and prison escapee who was once named Australia’s Most Wanted, Brett senior was discovered hiding out in the Philippines with his new wife and baby to avoid facing charges relating to unlawful possession of guns, ammunition and more than $90 000 in cash.

Crime widow Roberta Williams, and her fiancé Robert Carpenter, welcomed their son Giuseppe Sebastian some time in January. Roberta has Tye, aged 23, Danielle, aged 18, and Breanne, aged 16, from an earlier relationship, and daughter Dhakota, aged 9, from her marriage to Carl Williams. Carl Williams, a convicted murderer and drug trafficker, was killed by another inmate in 2010 while serving a life sentence in prison.

Actor Erik Thompson, and his wife, actress Caitlin McDougall, welcomed their second child, Magnus James, on January 2. The couple have a daughter named Eilish, aged 4. Erik plays dad Dave Rafter on the hit TV show, Packed to the Rafters. Erik was born in Scotland and emigrated to New Zealand as a child; both he and his wife came here from New Zealand.

AFL star Nick Maxwell, and his wife Erin, welcomed their first child on January 18, a girl named Milla Eve. Nick is the skipper of the Collingwood Magpies.

NRL player Mark Riddell, and his wife Karli, welcomed their first child, Harrison, in mid-January. In 2010 Mark spent a season in the English Superleague playing for the Wigan Warriors, who won the premiership. Last year he returned to Australia to play for the Sydney Roosters.

AFL player Daniel Cross, and his wife Samantha, welcomed their son Tyler in January. Daniel plays for the Western Bulldogs.

NRL star Akuila Uate, and his partner Samantha Maton, welcomed their first child in late January – a girl named Tatianna Sera Loami. Akuila plays for the Newcastle Knights, and moved to Australia from Fiji as a schoolboy; he became an Australian citizen recently. His surname is pronounced yoo-AH-tay.

AFL player Heath Scotland, and his wife Alisha, welcomed their second son, Tyler, on February 11. The Scotlands already have a son named Riley. Heath plays for the Carlton Blues.

Media personality Kellie Connolly, and her husband Adam, welcomed their third son, William Adam, in February. Their other sons are Thomas, aged 5, and Lachlan, aged 3. Kellie was a news presenter and TV host on Channel 9 for many years, and currently has a radio spot on 2GB and runs her own media consultancy.

Journalist James Chessell, and his wife Jan, welcomed their son Patrick in February; Patrick joins big sister Hannah. James was with The Australian for many years; last year he became deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review.

V8 Supercar driver Mark Winterbottom, and his wife Renee, welcomed their first child, Oliver, on February 29. Mark drives with Ford Performance Racing.

Soccer player Brett Holman, and his wife Femke, welcomed their first child, Emma, in early March [pictured]. Brett plays for the national men’s team, the Socceroos, and lives in the Netherlands, where he plays for AK.

NRL player Robert Lui, and his partner Taleah Backo, welcomed their son Matthias on March 8. Robert has just finished three seasons with Wests Tigers, and is signed with the North Queensland Cowboys for this year.

Singer and actor Jason Donovan, and his wife, former stage manager Angela Malloch, welcomed their third child, Molly, on March 9. Jason and Angela have a daughter Jemma, aged 11, and a son Zach, aged 10. Jason and his family live in Britain; last year he played Captain von Trapp in The Sound of Music and took part in the Here and Now concert tour.

Sports presenter Basil Zempilas, and his wife Amy, welcomed their first child, Ava Jessica, on March 9. The middle name is after Basil’s mother. Basil is a sports commentator on Seven News, and has also covered the Olympic Games. He has his own radio show on 92.9.

TV host Catriona Rowntree, and her husband, grazier James Pettit, welcomed their second son on March 11, naming him Charles Stephen. They are already parents to 19-month-old Andrew. Catriona has been a presenter on Channel 9 travel show Getaway for many years.

AFL player Liam Picken, and his partner Annie Nolan, welcomed their first child, Malachy Thomas, at the end of March. Liam plays for the Western Bulldogs.

Real estate entrepreneur Amber Werchon, and her husband, lawyer Paul McHugh, welcomed their first child, Max Hayden, on September 9. Amber is one of the youngest female real estate principals in Australia, and entered the property market at the age of 16.

Celebrity Baby News: Merrick Watts and Georgie Sulzberger

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Comedian and Triple M radio host, Merrick Watts, and his wife, former PR manager Georgie Sulzberger, welcomed their daughter Kinga Rose on December 30. Kinga joins big brother Wolfe, aged three.

Kinga is a Polish pet form of the name Kunigunde, a German name meaning “family war”. Saint Kinga is one of the patrons of Poland, and Georgie’s family background is Polish, so the name honours her heritage. According to the newspaper article, they will be pronouncing her name KEEN-gah.

Merrick says that his mother isn’t a fan of her new grand-daughter’s name, but luckily doesn’t seem too fazed by that.

The newspaper article decided to use this opportunity to list some of the “quirky” celebrity baby names of 2011. Making the list were Poet Poppin Nicholson, Arlo Galafassi, Sailor Denyer and Hudson Stone.

They then contrasted this with the “mainstream” choices of Faith Kidman Urban, Flynn Bloom, Ruby Murch, Bobby Cousins and Oscar Judd.

Kinga Rose is the final celebrity baby for 2011; it’s been a bumper year for babies, but we are expecting quite a few during the summer and early autumn, so stay tuned!

(Story and photo from the Herald Sun, December 30 2011; photo shows Merrick, Georgie and Wolfe)

Celebrity Baby News: Hugh Riminton and Mary Lloyd

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Political reporter Hugh Riminton, and his wife, TV journalist Mary Lloyd, welcomed their daughter Holly May on December 27. Holly has older sisters named Caitlin and Coco, and a big brother Jacob who is 2 and a half years old.

Hugh has had a distinguished career in TV journalism, often working as a foreign correspondent, and has won several awards. He is currently Political Editor for Ten News, and also hosts political interview show, Meet the Press. He married long-time partner Mary Lloyd in December last year; the wedding was held in Cambodia.

According to Hugh’s Twitter account, he found a four-leaf clover in his garden on his first wedding anniversary while expecting the baby. I wonder they didn’t think of calling her Clover, which would fit in with her sisters also having names starting with C. I guess Holly as a Christmas name won out, or perhaps Clover is too strongly identified with the mayor of Sydney, Clover Moore.

(Story and photo from the Herald Sun, December 30 2011)

Waltzing with … Sunniva

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This blog post was originally published on December 25 2011, and revised and re-posted on December 23 2015.

From the very start I knew that I would have a name profile due on Christmas Day, and began thinking of suitable names for girls. Because Christmas is just after the Summer Solstice in Australia, and because Christmas is on a Sunday this year, I kept coming back to one name: Sunniva.

This lovely name is the Scandinavian form of the Anglo-Saxon Sunngifu, which means “gift of the sun”. As Christmas is a time for sharing gifts, and Australian Christmases can often be hot and sunny, and Christmas 2011 is on the Sun’s own day, it seemed perfect.

The story of Sunniva is one fraught with drama and high adventure. According to legend, there was once a 10th century Irish princess called Sunngifu, a virgin and very devout Christian. When her land was invaded by a pagan king who wished to marry her, she made a brave and rather desperate decision to escape. Along with a group of loyal companions, amongst them her brother Alban, she fled in a ship without oars or sails, trusting their destination to God.

After a few hairy encounters with Vikings, the pious company settled on the island of Selje, off the coast of Norway. They moved into an empty cave, and supported themselves with fishing and gathering wild foods, living a life of austerity and holiness. If you live in a comfortable house with a supermarket just down the road, this might sound a bit eccentric or at least cold and dismal, but Irish saints had a long and rich tradition of taking themselves off to remote windswept islands to worship in peace, so Sunniva and her crew were pretty normal by the standards of their time and place.

Unfortunately, the locals on the mainland believed these peaceful cave-dwellers were rustling their sheep and chowing down on ill-gotten roast mutton rather than the simple viands of nature. They came after them, intending to murder them as payback. Sunngifu and her company prayed to God to save them from the angry Norsemen. When the armed band arrived on the island, they found nobody there, and the cave sealed by a landslide. None of the exiles were ever seen alive again.

(This story may remind Australian readers both of Waltzing Matilda, with the accused sheep-thief preferring death to punishment by the authorities, and Picnic at Hanging Rock, which also ends with a mysterious disappearance in a cave which seals itself.)

Many years later, after reports of an unearthly light and heavenly fragrance in the area, King Olaf Tryggvason ordered that the cave be opened. Sunngifu’s body was found unharmed by the landslide and incorrupted, and as this was a clear sign of sainthood, King Olaf had a church built in her honour. Her relics were moved to Bergen Cathedral, where they performed another miracle by halting a fire (these useful relics disappeared at some point, unfortunately).

She became known in Scandinavia as Saint Sunniva, and is Norway’s first female saint. Saint Sunniva is the patron of Bergen, and the west coast of Norway. Her feast day is July 8 – appropriately enough, at the height of the northern hemisphere summer. The island of Selje is a place of pilgrimage, and you may see there the ruins of a Benedictine monastery dedicated to the saint, called Selje Abbey.

Sunniva has been well used as a girl’s name in Scandinavia, and is currently #68 in Norway, although falling in popularity, as it peaked at #32 in 2000.

Sunniva is pronounced SOON-ee-vah, but some people prefer to say it SUN-ee-va. Other popular pronunciations are soon-EE-va and sun-EE-va. You could also pronounce it soon-IE-va or sun-IE-va.

Sunniva has a happy meaning, well suited to summer and a land of sunshine.  It provides good ties with our English, Irish and Norwegian heritages (we have several popular celebrities of Norwegian ancestry, and bush poet Henry Lawson’s father was from Norway). It’s an unusual name in Australia, but doesn’t sound particularly strange, and isn’t hard to spell or pronounce, once you work out which pronunciation you’d like.

Attractive nicknames for Sunniva include Sue, Susie, Sunny, Eve, Eva, Evie, Neva, Neve, and Zuzu.

POLL RESULT
Sunniva received an approval rating of 81%, making it one of the highest-rated names of 2011. 30% of people loved the name Sunniva, while only one person hated it.

(Picture is from the cover of Emma’s Secret by Steena Holmes)

Celebrity Baby News: Tiago and Paola Calvano

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Soccer player Tiago Calvano, and his wife Paola, welcomed their second child and eldest son on December 1 (traditionally the first day of summer). He weighed 3.7 kg (8 pounds) and has been named Jean Pedro. Jean Calvano joins big sister Julia.

Tiago is a Brazilian soccer player and holds Italian citizenship. He joined the Newcastle Jets at this start of this year’s season. Tiago says that the birth of his son has made his move to Australia complete.

(Story and photo from the Newcastle Herald, December 3 2011).

The Nativity Play Baby

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Last Saturday, the Christmas in the Park celebrations were held in Coolum, on the Sunshine Coast. They had a real live baby playing baby Jesus in the nativity play, with the baby’s real life parents, Luke and Sarah Quinn, playing the roles of Joseph and Mary, and his grandfather Gary Quinn providing music in the band.

The baby’s name is Hosea Courage Quinn. Hosea is from a Hebrew name meaning “salvation”; it is the name of one of the Biblical prophets. The Quinns chose it for its meaning.

The middle name Courage was chosen by Hosea’s father, because “it’s good to have something to live up to”. Virtue names are very much back in vogue, and this one sounds strong and quite masculine.

I think Hosea Courage Quinn is a very striking name, with a neo-Puritan ring to it. It’s one that sticks in my mind.

(Story and photo from Coolum and North Shore News, December 16 2011)

Boys Names from Stars and Constellations

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It is only a few days until the Christmas holidays, or the holidays have already begun. Although the stars seem more crisp and vivid in winter, and some constellations of spring and autumn are spectacular, it is summer I connect with star-gazing. The warm nights and long lazy Christmas holidays seem to go with lying in your backyard looking upwards, or watching the night sky glittering above you on camping trips. Little wonder that the stars of summer are often the first we learn to identify, and the first we yearn towards as we gaze into infinitude.

This is the companion list to Girls Names from Stars and Constellations, and should be read in conjunction with it. Need a super quick guide to the southern skies? Go here! The picture used is a Christmas card created by Thomas Le, a refugee from Vietnam. He donated this artwork to help other migrants, and it is on show at the Museum of Victoria.

Altair

Altair is the common name for Alpha Aquila, the brightest star in the constellation Aquila (“The Eagle”), and one of the brightest overall. Altair is a translation of the Arabic for “the flying eagle”, and the identification of the star with an eagle goes back to the Babylonians and Sumerians, who called Altair “The Eagle Star”. The Kulin people of central Victoria also saw the star as an eagle; it is Bunjil, their creator, who was blown into the sky by a great wind and became a star. Other peoples of southern Australia saw Altair as a hunter; it is his Boomerang thrown across the sky which became the constellation in which Gemma can be found. This cool star name can either be said al-TAH-yir, or al-TARE, and is also on the list Boys Names from Video Games. You can see Altair from Australia in winter and spring, and it’s in the north of the Milky Way.

Asterion

Asterion is the common name for Beta Canes Venatici, the second-brightest star in the constellation Canes Ventatici. This constellation began as the club of the constellation Boötes (“The Herdsman, The Ploughman”). However, due to a number of errors in translation from Greek to Arabic to Latin, “club” became “dogs”. Having invented these dogs, astronomers had a good squint and decided that the constellation looked like two greyhounds. It’s never explained why a herdsman would have hunting dogs rather than herding dogs. Astronomers named one star Chara (“dear”) and the other Asterion (“starry”) – then they swapped the names around to create further confusion. In Greek mythology, Asterion was the personal name of the Minotaur, a bull-headed monster who was the product of an unnatural coupling between a queen of Crete and a bull. It’s a flamboyant name, but it is actually a star name with a starry meaning; it’s said as-TEH-ri-on. Canes Ventatici is visible in the autumn from Australia, but its stars are not bright or easy to see.

Atlas

Atlas is the common name for 27 Tauri, a triple-star system in the constellation Taurus and part of the Pleiades cluster. As well as the Seven Sisters, which include Maia, the Pleiades cluster contains their parents, Atlas and Pleione. Atlas was one of the Titans, and after warring against the Olympians, he was sentenced to hold up the heavens on his shoulders (before this, the Sky and the Earth, parents of the Titans, were free to lie together in a lingering embrace, so Atlas is basically being used as a birth control device for deities). He has come to be a symbol of superhuman strength and stoic endurance. The name is so ancient that its meaning is very uncertain, but it may mean “endure”, “support”, or “sea”. Atlas has given his name to the Atlas Mountains in North Africa, and the Atlantic Ocean, as well as the word for a book filled with maps. The name is starting to have a mild vogue here. You will be able to see Atlas in the Pleiades during summer in Australia.

Garnet

The star Mu Cephei is commonly known as Herschel’s Garnet Star, because when astronomer William Herschel described it, he wrote that it was “a very fine deep garnet colour”. Indeed it is, being a red supergiant that is one of the largest in the Milky Way. It’s in the constellation Cepheus, which represents Andromeda’s father. Without doubt he is the dullest creature in the whole Andromeda drama, but I guess since they put the sea monster in the sky, it would have seemed rude to leave him out. You may recall that the aliens in TV comedy 3rd Rock From The Sun came from a planet in a galaxy on the Cepheus border. Unfortunately, Cepheus is only visible in the northern hemisphere, so we cannot see the Garnet Star from here. The colour garnet is named for the red gemstone; its name is said to be derived from the (also red) pomegranate fruit which means “seeded apple”. It’s a unisex name, but historically better known as masculine in Australia.

Keid

Keid is a common name for Omicron2 Eridani, or 40 Eridani, a triple star system in the constellation Eridanus consisting of two red dwarfs and a white dwarf. Eridanus represents a great river, and is meant to be the water pouring from the jar of the Water Bearer, the constellation Aquarius. In ancient times, it was said to be the path of souls. Eridanus can be easily seen from Australia; it is virtually overhead during the summer months. You can see one of the red dwarf stars in Keid with the naked eye; however the other two stars can only be viewed through a telescope. In the TV series Star Trek, 40 Eridani is the location of the planet Vulcan, home of Mr Spock. Eridanus is also a system of planets in the video game Halo, so it’s got sci-fi credentials galore. Keid is from the Arabic word for “eggshells”, and can be pronounced KYED or KEED. I prefer KEED, but KYED sounds like popular Kai (maybe too much, as people will no doubt confuse the two names).

Kio

Kio (KEE-oh) is the ancient Chinese name for Spica, the common name for Alpha Virginis, a blue giant binary star and the brightest in the constellation Virgo. While Spica means “ear of wheat” in Latin, Kio comes from the Chinese for “horn, spike”, as it was seen as “the horn of Jupiter”. Spica was the star used to discover the precession of the equinoxes, and the constellation Virgo contains the spring equinox point (autumn equinox in the northern hemisphere). The constellation has represented a goddess holding sheaves of grain from the earliest beginnings of astronomy in Babylonia. Not only is Kio one of those perky three-letter names that appeal to many people, but the Chinese saw Spica as a “lucky star” – what could be more positive than being named after a lucky star? The constellation Virgo can be seen throughout autumn and winter in Australia, and the very brightness of Spica makes it easy to find.

Leo

Leo is a familiar constellation, because it is one of those in the zodiac. It’s already in the list Boys Names From the Top 100 of the 1930s, however I think it is worth revisiting from an astronomical viewpoint. The constellation’s name means “lion”, and seems to have been pictured as a lion by many ancient civilisations. I’m not sure if there was a single original Lion in mythology, but the Babylonians had many leonine protective gods, and a winged lion was the symbol for the city of Babylon. The Ancient Greeks identified it with the Nemean lion, a monstrous beast, both fierce and cunning, which was killed by Heracles as the first of his twelve labours. Its hide was impervious to attack, so Heracles wore it as his armour. The constellation Leo is truly majestic, and contains many bright stars. The chief of these is Regulus, also called The King Star, and The Heart of the Lion. Leo can be seen for most of the year, but is easiest to view in late summer to early autumn from Australia.

Nash

Nash is a common name for Gamma Sagitarrii, an orange giant binary star in the constellation Sagittarius. Sagittarius depicts a centaur, said to represent the wise teacher and healer Chiron. The Milky Way is at its densest in Sagittarius, as this is where the centre of the galaxy lies, so it contains many star clusters and nebulae. In Australia this impressive constellation is easy to find, and we also get the best view of it, being able to see the Milky Way so much more clearly. Look in the west part of the sky in the early evening, halfway between the horizon and the point directly overhead. Its brightest stars form a recognisable shape which is called The Teapot; Nash is the spout of this teapot. Sagittarius is most visible in the middle of winter, and bright enough that you can see it even if there is a moon. The name Nash is from the Arabic for “arrowhead”, for this star is the tip of the archer’s arrow, which points toward the star Antares, in Scorpius. It’s also a surname derived from the word for “ash tree”.

Orion

Orion is a constellation representing a character from Greek mythology. This gigantic hunter seems to be a bawdy folk hero – larger than life and twice as natural. It is lusty Orion who pursued the Pleiades, so that Zeus had to turn them to stars for their protection. One version of his ending is that Orion boasted of being able to kill any animal on Earth, and so the Earth goddess, in her displeasure, created the Scorpion to sting him to death. Both Orion and the Scorpion were placed in the sky as constellations. Orion contains many brilliant stars, such as Betelgeuse, Rigel and Bellatrix, and even the astronomical novice can locate the three stars forming Orion’s Belt; I was taught these were The Three Sisters (a South African name). Orion is clearly visible in the summer from Australia, and because it is positioned differently in the southern hemisphere, we sometimes call this constellation The Saucepan. The name Orion is from the Akkadian for “heaven’s light”.

Perseus

Perseus is a constellation representing a character from Greek mythology; he was a hero, the son of Zeus and a mortal princess. Perseus led an extremely exciting life, part fairytale, part soap opera, but he is probably best known for killing the Gorgon Medusa, a woman who had snakes on her head, and thus had a permanent bad hair day of epic proportions. Perseus had nifty flying sandals to zip around on, although much later people liked to imagine him riding the flying horse Pegasus (this never actually happened in the legends). Perseus rescued and married Princess Andromeda, and the constellation has his hand reaching up to Andromeda’s foot, to show the moment of deliverance. The star Algol in Perseus is called The Demon Star, and represents the head of Medusa. We can see the constellation in late spring and summer from Australia, and the meaning of Perseus is not certain; it may mean “to destroy”. Percy is the obvious nickname, and the one used in the novel series Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan.

Phoenix

Phoenix is a minor constellation in the southern sky named after the mythical bird. The Phoenix can be found in the mythologies of many lands, from Egypt to China to Russia, and is famous for being able to renew itself in fire, which made it a popular symbol of resurrection in Christianity. Its name is from the Greek for “crimson”. Phoenix has become a popular name lately; it’s unisex, but used more for boys. It’s hard not to connect it to The Order of the Phoenix in the Harry Potter books; Fawkes the phoenix is the loyal pet of Albus Dumbledore. A phoenix is also a major character in the children’s book The Phoenix and the Carpet by Edith Nesbit. The constellation Phoenix can be seen from Australia during the summer, however it is faint and only possesses two stars bright enough to be seen with the naked eye.

Sirius

Sirius is the common name for Alpha Canis Majoris, a binary star which is the brightest in the constellation Canis Major (“Great Dog”), and the brightest in the sky, being almost twice as bright as Canopus, the second-brightest. Canis Major is seen as one of the dogs following the hunter Orion, with Sirius representing its doggy nose. However, Sirius was considered to be a dog in his own right, and is called The Dog Star. In the northern hemisphere, Sirius rises in summer, and so the very hottest time of year is called “the dog days”. Although Sirius rises in the winter here, we don’t call the coldest time of year the dog days, although strictly speaking, we should! In July, you can see Sirius both evening and morning. Almost every culture in the world has connected Sirius with dogs or wolves, but the Boorong people of Victoria saw it as part of a constellation representing the Wedge-Tailed Eagle – one of the most important of the spirit elders. The Sirius was also the flagship for the First Fleet to Australia, giving it another Australian connection. Its name comes from the Greek for “burning, scorching”.