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Saturday Sibsets: A New Generation of Daddos

22 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Andrew Daddo has been on our TV screens … it seems like pretty much forever. (It’s only about a quarter of a century, but that is quite a chunk of my life, so it seems like a really long time). He started off as a teenager hosting music shows in the 1980s, and became the first Australian to head off to America and work on MTV.

As he got older, he settled into fronting up for the kind of programmes where they show the world’s craziest commercials, kids saying the darnedest things, charity events, Cannes Film Festivals and the funny side of the Olympics. He’s also been one of the more informative travel reporters we’ve seen on TV.

As Andrew has two brothers called Lachlan (younger) and Cameron (older), who also successfully appeared on television as actors, reporters and presenters, for a while it seemed that the entire Australian TV industry would have collapsed if you removed the Daddos from it.

Andrew has an identical twin brother Jamie, who was hit by a car in his teens while he was out celebrating grand final night. He suffered brain injuries, was in a coma for months, and has been in a motorised wheelchair since the accident. He gained his Master of Fine Arts from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, and has worked as an artist for over twenty years, gaining acclaim for his sensitive portraits. He also writes poetry.

Andrew’s middle name is Dugald and Jamie’s is Beilby – names which filled them horror for years and made them decide their parents hated them from birth, until they found out they were actually family names with special meanings. Now they have grown accepting of them, and no longer pretend they were never given middle names.

Andrew is a successful author of children’s books, and writes for all ages, from preschool to teenager. He is still on television as the host of The One, a reality show contest which pits psychics against each other to see which one is most psychic. He also does the voice-over for The Apprentice.

Oddly enough for someone who’s made a successful career out of television, Andrew doesn’t really approve of it, and rarely allows his children to watch TV on school nights. He jokingly refers to himself as “half-Amish”.

The Daddos have been in the popular consciousness for so many years that if someone asked to visualise a typical Australian male in his 40s, I would probably picture someone who was a morph of all the Daddo brothers crossed with Hugh Jackman.

Despite their sensible Scottish first names, their surname is Cornish, and probably based on the name David, or possibly the word for “good” – yet more hard-working and successful Cornish stock in Australia to add to our list.

As we look at the children of the Daddo brothers, it’s tempting to wonder if they have produced a fresh crop of Daddos who will, in a few years perhaps, be gracing our television screens.

Andrew is married to Jacqui, and they have three children: Felix, aged 12; Anouk Bibi, aged 10; and Jasper; aged 7. I think this sibset is attractive, and the names sound great together. It sounds discreetly fashionable, yet not at all out of place for upmarket Sydney suburbia.

Lachlan or “Lochie” is married to Karina Brown, a model and TV host, and they have two daughters: Daisy Isabella, aged 6; and Gracie May, nearly 3. This is a cute, girly sibset that almost rhymes, and with their surname, sounds almost cartoon-like.

Cameron is married to model Alison Brahe. They have three children: Lotus, aged 15; River Tru, aged 11; and Bodhi Faith, aged 5 (a girl, a boy, and a girl). Cameron and Alison say they have always liked “unique and non-traditional” names; as they live in L.A., it’s hard not to think of this as a “hippie Hollywood” sibset. As often happens with these cool, unique names, they are already sounding slightly dated (as in, they sound like names that were unusual a few years ago, but now they’re fairly mainstream).

Jamie is only recently married, and doesn’t have any children, but of course all these kids are his nieces and nephews.

Sad Celebrity Baby News (contents may cause distress)

21 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

To complete the entries for Baby Loss Awareness Week, I’m going to cover those celebrities who have unfortunately lost newborn babies during 2011. As we saw yesterday, many thousands of couples will suffer pregnancy or neonatal loss each year, and fame is no protection against this heartbreak.


On January 21, the prop forward for the NSW Waratahs rugby union club, Sekope Kepu, and his wife, Anna, had a stillborn son. Sekope’s mother chose the name Wesley for him, after Wesley College, the school that Sekope attended in Auckland where he was captain of the rugby team. Anna had wanted to call the baby Israel, because Sekope’s name is the Tongan form of Jacob, and in the Old Testament, Jacob was renamed Israel by an angel. However, the couple have decided to keep that name for a future son.

The Kepus have a three-year-old girl named Faith-Rose, and Sekope felt that he had to stay strong for his wife and daughter; he only broke down when he had to share the news with his parents. The Kepus, who are a relatively young couple, gained crucial emotional support from their parents, and from their church group. They say they want more children, if that is part of God’s plan, and visit Wesley’s grave every second day; the headstone reads, “Love to Wesley”, in Tongan.

Last month, the Kepu family travelled to New Zealand to make an official visit to Wesley College, where Sekope received a hero’s welcome, made an inspirational speech, and treated them to some of his famously powerful singing.

(Stories from Sydney Morning Herald, March 12 and September 15 2011; photo of the school visit from zimbio.com)

On March 10, Olympic aerial ski-er, Alisa Camplin, and her husband, English businessman Oliver Warner, had a son called Finnan Maximus. Born six weeks premature with a congenital heart condition, Finnan endured six operations before his life ended on March 20.

Alisa and Oliver went public with their story in late May, giving interviews to Channel 9’s A Current Affair, and Woman’s Day magazine. They announced that they were setting up a charity called Finnan’s Gift, organised through the Royal Children’s Hospital, to help raise money to buy equipment to detect heart defects in other babies. They want Finnan’s life to stand for something, so that the world will never forget him, and because they don’t want other babies to suffer the same way.

Finnan’s Gift has already raised $300 000, which will be used to buy an echocardiology scanning machine. Alisa and Oliver officially unveiled the machine yesterday, October 20. Alisa says that Finnan’s Gift gave them a positive outlet for their grief, and offered them a lifeline when they were at their lowest point. They feel that the public support has helped keep them going emotionally.

Alisa and Oliver were married in January, and in July they said they plan to have more children when they are ready.

On July 25, the co-captain of the Sydney Swans football team, Jarrad McVeigh, and his wife Clementine, had a baby girl called Luella. Born with a serious heart condition, Luella passed away on August 24 at Westmead Hospital. Not only Jarrad and Clementine, but the whole team mourned the loss of Luella, and counselling was made available.

In the first match since the tragedy, on August 27, the Swans caused one of the biggest upsets of the season, defeating Geelong at its home ground, where it had not lost in 1462 days. Both the Sydney and Geelong players wore black armbands as a mark of respect.

Jarrad’s older brother Mark plays for Essendon, and the Essendon players also wore black armbands in the same round. Mark paid tribute to Luella by “blowing a kiss to the heavens” following his team’s dramatic win over Port Adelaide. Mark had a baby daughter called Ariana last March.

Their loss still recent, Jarrad and Clementine continue to grieve in private with the support of their club.

(Photo from Triple M)

Saturday Sibset: Jacinta Tynan and Her Two Boys

15 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring


Jacinta Tynan is a journalist and news presenter who works for Sky News Australia. She is the grand-niece of author John O’Grady, who wrote the best-selling comic classic, They’re a Weird Mob, under the name Nino Culotta; he made rather a career of explaining the Australian culture of his time, with satirical books such as Aussie English and Aussie Etiket.

Jacinta has two young sons: Jasper Jerome Pep, aged 2, and Otis Liam Francis, who was born just a few months ago in May.

Jacinta’s partner is property executive Liam Timms, and he has also managed to get himself on television, appearing on ABC’s science show Catalyst, in a special on the science behind fatherhood. Baby stories so often focus on the mother and neglect fathers that I do recommend clicking this link to watch the show, and if you can’t watch the video, you can read the transcript.

At the end of the show, we get to see Liam’s reactions as his son is being born, and nervousness soon turns to fear, because there are complications, and he is told Jacinta needs an emergency caesarean. While the other dads got to be at the birth of their children, poor Liam was left anxiously pacing the corridor.

In fact, Jasper’s entrance to the world was dramatic all round, because what the show doesn’t tell you is that Jacinta went into labour while she was reading the news! She was in labour for 48 hours, and the baby just refused to come out, until the caesarean was performed as a last resort. Jacinta had done a Calmbirth course, and was meditating throughout, so she coped extremely well. Even though Jasper had been through a gruelling ordeal being born, doctors were amazed at what a calm baby he was, which Jacinta attributes to her meditating twice daily during pregnancy.

On Catalyst, you get to see the end of Liam’s story – he is left alone with Jasper for two hours, and quite clearly falls in love with him at first sight. It was a very touching conclusion, because unlike the other dads, Liam was worried that he wouldn’t be able to summon the “right” emotions or bond with his son, and it just wasn’t a problem at all.

Jacinta was one of the mature-aged mothers who dashed off a huffy opinion piece in the wake of Dr Barry Walters telling her that she was “selfish” to have had her first child at 40, and her second at 41. She feels that she is now the best mother it is possible for her to be, having achieved most of her dreams, and is now ready to devote herself fully to her children.

You would think that Jacinta might have had some sympathy for Dr Walters being vilified in the press, as she too was subjected to much vitriol after publishing an article on how flipping easy parenting is. After being a parent for a whole 9 months, she decided she pretty much knew everything about it, and told us all motherhood was an absolute breeze and everyone should stop complaining about it.

I’m not sure why Jasper Jerome was named Jasper Jerome, but the name Pep is after the boat that Liam and Jacinta met on (Liam is a keen boatie, and according to the Catalyst show, seems to have bought a cradle to take the baby on the boat before anything else).

Otis Liam Francis appears to have been born very quietly, and without all the fanfare of his big brother. He is one of two celebrity babies named Otis this year, and has his dad’s name as one of his middles.

Jasper and Otis seem like a very “American-style” sibset to me, with a touch of the West about it, as well as a touch of Hollywood. It’s handsome, hipster, and old money made cool again.

Celebrity Baby News: Craig Thomson and Zoe Arnold

14 Friday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Federal Labor MP Craig Thomson, and his wife, radio newsreader Zoe Arnold, welcomed their second daughter on October 13, named Adelaide. Adelaide Thomson joins big sister Matilda, aged 2.

Craig has had a career as a talented union leader, and was elected to the seat of Dobell, in New South Wales, in 2007. Zoe is a radio newsreader on Sea FM, on the Central Coast, currently on leave. She was a media adviser to former New South Wales Health Minister John Della Bosca, until he resigned after becoming embroiled in a sex scandal. Craig and Zoe were married in January this year.

Craig Thomson is currently facing four separate enquiries that he misappropriated union funds for his own benefit, and used his union-paid credit card to pay for escort services before he entered Parliament. He is under investigation by The NSW and Victorian police, Fair Work Australia, and the NSW Department for Fair Trading. The scandal leaves the Gillard government in a very vulnerable position if Craig Thomson has to leave his seat, hence the close media scrutiny.

The birth of Adelaide must come as a rare piece of good news for the MP who always seem to have “embattled” before his name in the headlines, and he also gets a week off Parliament to spend with his new daughter. Matilda and Adelaide make a very patriotic sibset.

(Photo from the Herald Sun, August 25 2011; photo shows Zoe, Craig and Matilda)

Celebrity Baby News: Sara Groen and Clark Kirby

13 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Channel 7 weather presenter, Sara Groen, and her husband Clark Kirby, a corporate director at Village Roadshow, welcomed their first child on October 12; a daughter named Estelle Kathryn. Estelle Kirby’s name seems to have been chosen for its meaning of “star”.

Sara and Clark met as university students, got engaged in Paris last year, and were married in January. They live in Melbourne.

(Story and photo from the Herald Sun, October 13 2011)

Celebrity Baby News: John Polson and Amanda Harding

13 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Actor and director John Polson, and his wife, Amanda Harding, welcomed their second daughter on October 12, named Marlowe Vivian. Marlowe Polson joins big sister Harper, who will turn three on Boxing Day this year.

John is the director of Swimfan, and Hide and Seek, which became #1 at the box office in the United States. He is best known as the founder of Tropfest, the world’s largest short film festival. In 2007, Tropfest partnered with the Tribeca Film Festival to present Tropfest@Tribeca at Battery Park in New York City.

Amanda is an American casting director who also works as a yoga instructor and is an animal rights activist; she and John are ardent proponents of home birthing. They were married in 2004 and have been based in New York for several years now.

(Photo from zimbio.com)

Celebrity Baby News: Nicki Gemmell and Andrew Sholl

13 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, Cornish names

Author Nikki Gemmell, and her husband, Andrew Sholl, have welcomed their fourth child and third son, Jago, on July 7. The name Jago was suggested by a schoolteacher from Cornwall, and as Andrew’s surname is Cornish, it made sense. The Cornish form of James, it’s pronounced JAY-go. Jago Sholl has two older brothers called Oliver and Lachlan, aged around 9 and 10, and a big sister old enough to go to school, but I have not been able to discover her name.

Nikki has worked as a radio journalist for the ABC, and been a producer for the BBC World Service, but she is best known as a novelist. Her 2003 novel, The Bride Stripped Bare, became a best-seller, and a notorious talking point because of its explicit sexual content. Nikki is greatly appreciated in France, where she has been described as “a female Jack Kerouac“. She currently writes a column for The Australian, and a companion piece to The Bride Stripped Bare will be published next year.

Andrew Sholl is a former Australian journalist who has worked extensively in media public relations in the UK, including as an adviser to former British Prime Minister, Tony Blair. He is currently head of external communications for the NBN Co., which is setting up the much-touted digital broadband network around Australia. Nikki and Andrew are now based in Sydney, after many years living in Notting Hill, London.

Last month, Nikki wrote a column about unexpectedly becoming pregnant in her mid-forties, and the joy that baby Jago has brought their family.

(Story and photo from The Australian, September 17 2011)

Celebrity Baby News from the AFL

10 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

A quick catch-up of some of the babies born to AFL players over the past few months. They were all first babies for each couple, and all daughters.

Scott McMahon, player for North Melbournee, and his wife Desiree, had Jayda in early July.

Domenic Cassissi, captain of Port Adelaide, and his wife Maiya, had Eva at the end of July.

Jay Schulz, player for Port Adelaide, and his partner Amy, had Halo Ava at the start of August.

Celebrity Baby News: Ben Cousins and Maylea Tinecheff

10 Monday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

Former AFL star Ben Cousins, and his partner, naturopath Maylea Tinecheff, welcomed a son on September 16, who they have named Bobby Ernest. Bobby Cousins was born at St John of God Hospital in Perth, Western Australia. Maylea has two children from a previous relationship, but nothing is known about them; however, Bobby does have siblings.

Ben is often said to be one of the greatest AFL players of all time. During his career with the West Coast Eagles, he won the Brownlow Medal, Most Valuable Player, and a premiership medallion. He was selected six times for the All-Australia team, and represented Australia in the International Rules series. He was West Coast’s club champion for four seasons, and captain for five seasons. He retired last year.

Unfortunately, his off-field activities, including recreational drug use, traffic convictions, and associations with criminals have plagued his personal life. Hopefully fatherhood will provide the motivation for him to stay clean and healthy. Ben and Maylea have known each other for 16 years, and have been together in a rekindled relationship since 2009.

(Full story and photos in New Idea magazine).

Unique Boys Names from Tasmania, 2010

09 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

astronomical names, Australian Aboriginal names, celebrity baby names, created names, Danish names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, German names, Greek names, hebrew names, Irish names, Latin names, Maori names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, nature names, Old English names, place names, popular culture, saints names, surname names, Tibetan names, unique names, vocabulary names

This follows on the previous list, Unique Girls Names from Tasmania, 2010. Please read the notes attached to that to see how names were chosen. Although there were fewer unique names for boys, they were much more likely to be genuine names, and not just variant spellings of common names. Whether you like these names or not, it’s nice to know that not everyone calls their children by names from the Top 100. There’s a lot of variety out there once you start looking. (If you are unsure what the animal in the photo is, it is a Tasmanian devil). 

Ambrose

This is the English form of a Latin name derived from the Greek, meaning “immortal”. It is connected linguistically to ambrosia, the food or drink of the gods in mythology, and is said to not only taste delicious, but to have a delightful aroma. In fact, it has been argued that ambrosia means “fragrant”, rather than “immortal”. If ambrosia had any basis in reality, it may be describing a honey product, although another theory is that it refers to the hallucinogenic mushroom, Amanita muscaria. The most famous namesake is probably Saint Ambrose of Milan, a 4th century Doctor of the Church who converted Saint Augustine. Interestingly, according to legend, bees swarmed on Ambrose’s face as a baby, leaving behind a drop of honey; this does seem to link the saint with the mythical ambrosia. An old-fashioned name, this fits in with the antique name revival, and the S/Z-ending for boys names. The meaning, and its associations with divine sweetness, is also hard to resist.

Other Latin names: Adrian, Augustus, Cassius, Ignatius, Maxmilian, Roman, Rufus, Silas, Sylvester

Anakin

This is the name of a Jedi knight in the Star Wars movies, father of Luke and Leia Skywalker, who crossed over to the Dark Side, and went on to become the heavy-breathing evil villain known as Darth Vader. Annikkin Starkiller was the name that George Lucas has originally chosen for Luke Skywalker, and when there was a major plot change and Darth Vader became Luke’s dad, a slight change of spelling meant that Darthy could have Luke’s old name. It’s sometimes claimed that George Lucas took Anakin’s name from his friend, Brtish film director Ken Annakin, but Lucas denies this. Although it’s tempting to give this name all number of foreboding meanings, we should remember it was originally planned as the hero’s name. It wasn’t clear in the beginning what kind of person the protagonist was going to be, and in one version it was an old man, and in another, a woman, so the name predates the character and the plot. Most likely, George Lucas just made it up.

Other sci-fi names: Auron, Draven, Grayson, Jango, Lex, Navi, Neo, Obi, Quillam

Bon

This is the name of the Scottish-born Australian rock musician, Bon Scott, who was the lyricist and lead singer for AC/DC, until his death in 1980, aged 34. AC/DC dedicated their next album, Back in Black, to him, which is the best-selling rock album of all time. Bon Scott is regarded as one of the greatest lead vocalists, has been inducted posthumously into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and been honoured in both his home town of Fremantle, Western Australia, and his birthplace of Kirriemuir, Scotland. Bon was born Ronald Belford Scott, and his nickname was given to him in primary school. As there was already a classmate called Ronald, and as Scott had recently emigrated from “Bonnie Scotland”, he was dubbed Bon. The Scottish word bonnie means “beautiful, fair, fine”, and is taken from the French word bon, meaning “good”. Not only honouring a rock legend, this name seems similar to Beau in meaning and origin.

Other celebrity names: Cadel, Cassidy, Denzel, Dre, Elvis, Hammond, Joaquin, Keanu, Leland, Maddox, Makaveli, Orlando, Otis, Sylvain, Tander, Tex, Ziggie Other Scottish names: Dougal, Jock

Clancy

This is from an Irish surname meaning “son of Flannchadh”, with Flannchadh being a Gaelic name meaning “red warrior”. The name is well known in Australia, because of the poem Clancy of The Overflow, by Banjo Paterson; The Overflow is the name of a station where Clancy, a drover, works. It’s based on the true story of Paterson, a lawyer, sending a letter to Thomas Gerald Clancy of The Overflow, and imagining Clancy’s enviable life in the bush, under the “glory of the everlasting stars”. The reply that he received to his letter – “Clancy’s gone to Queensland droving and we don’t know where he are” – delighted Paterson, and was included in the poem. Clancy also appears briefly in The Man from Snowy River, and when that poem was made into a movie, the role of Clancy was played by Jack Thompson. Clancy of the Overflow is a romanticised image of bush life as dreamed of by the city dweller, and probably seems a patriotic choice as a name.

Other Irish names: Fionbharr, Niall, Rafferty, Ronan, Sullivan

Diesel

This is the name for the fuel used in diesel engines, which are named after their inventor, French-born Rudolf Diesel. His German surname is said to be based on a short form of either Matthias or Dietrich. As it sounds quite tough and butch, and has connotations of being able to keep going like a mechanical engine, it’s been a popular nickname or assumed name, for celebrities such as American actor Vin Diesel, Australian rock singer Diesel, American basketball player Shaquille “The Diesel” O’Neill, and AFL player Greg “Diesel” Williams. Diesel is also a popular name for dogs, and with “dog names” for boys in style, Diesel seems very usable. US Olympian softabller, Jennie Finch, called her second son Diesel Dean Daigle, so now it’s a celebrity baby name as well.

Other vocabulary names: Ace, Buddy, Gray, Spike Other car-related names: Holden, Jag

Esmond

An Old English name meaning “gracious protection”, this fell out of use after the Norman Conquest, and became best known as a surname. Thackery’s History of Henry Esmond is a historical novel set in the time of Queen Anne, where the hero spends the whole book in love with his foster-sister and cousin, but marries his foster-mother instead (also his cousin). This surname is part of Australian history, because James Esmond was an Irish-Australian who was one of the first people to find gold during the Victorian goldrush. He was also politically prominent in the miner’s organisation, and commanded a section of miners in the Eureka Stockade rebellion. It’s tempting to wonder if baby Esmond is a descendant of James, or whether the name was chosen in honour of this famous rebel.

Other Old English names: Bede, Edgar, Edwin, Winston

Iluka

This is a small coastal town on the Clarence River in New South Wales, and its name is derived from an Aboriginal word meaning “by the sea”. It is pronounced eye-LOO-ka. Iluka is a popular tourist destination, blessed with beaches and rainforest, and people who live in the chilly southern parts of Australia may enjoy spending their winters here. Maybe the parents of Iluka spent a happy holiday in the town? It’s easy to see the appeal of it as a name, because it is so similiar to the popular Luka, but has a distinctive Australian meaning.

Other place names: Carlisle, Clyde, Griffith, Hamilton, Maitland, Memphis, Meredith, Nelson, Preston, Ripley, Weston, Wilson, Windsor Other Aboriginal names: Wirra

Manuka

This is the name of a small tree or shrub native to New Zealand and south-east Australia – including, of course, Tasmania. It’s scientific name is Leptospermum scoparium, and it’s also called tea tree (not the same tea tree that tea tree oil is made from). The name manuka is Maori, and comes from history, where one of the sea-going canoes that brought the Maoris to New Zealand is said to have been called Mānuka. It’s pronounced mahn-OO-ka. Manuka honey is not only delicious, but recently it’s been discovered to have powerful antibacterial properties, and you can now buy medical-grade manuka honey to apply to wounds. There is a town in Tasmania near Hobart called Tea Tree, which may be named after this useful plant.

Other nature names: Aspen, Brae, Nullah, Reef, Stone, Sunny, Tiger Other Polynesian names: Loti, Kalani, Tavita

Namkha

Meaning “sky, heaven” in Tibetan, a namkha is a yarn or thread cross used in Buddhism as a sacred weaving, used in ritual or placed on an altar. “Thread” is the literal translation of the word tantra, and the threads of the mankha symbolise the warp and weft of time and space. A famous bearer is Tibetan Buddhist teacher, Rigdzin Namkha Gyatso Rinpoche.

Other Asian names: Anshuman, Arjuna, Ba, Dravid, Khan, Omita, Yang, Yasir, Zusong

Shem

One of Noah’s sons in the Old Testament, Shem is Hebrew for “name”. It can refer to someone’s fame and reputation, and also to their essential nature and being. While Noah is one of the most popular boy’s names, the names of his sons, Shem, Ham and Japeth, have had only occasional use. This may be because from early on, these three men were seen as the progenitors of the various races (as that vague and inaccurate word was understood at the time). Different writers have claimed Shem as the source of either the “Semitic” peoples, all Europeans, Germans, Greeks, Persians, or Indians; some texts even say that God made Shem brown skinned, Japeth fair skinned and Ham dark skinned. These ideas on race and ethnicity now look rather embarrassing, or even offensive; at the very least, we know them to be scientifically wrong. In the Bible, Shem is said to be an ancestor of Abram, who founded the Abrahamic religions. The name is pronounced SHAYM, and although uncommon, sounds not unlike familiar names such as Sean, Sheamus and Shane.

Other Biblical names: Abel, Amos, Elihu, Gideon, Hezekiah, Jairus, Jotham, Matthias, Raphael, Simeon

Soren

This is an anglicised form of the Danish name Søren, which is a form of the Roman name family Severinus, derived from the personal name Severus, meaning “stern” in Latin. Certain Harry Potter fans may see this as a way of using the name of grim Potions Master, Professor Snape, without actually calling their son Severus. The name has been used several times in recent popular culture; most notably the vampire Soren in the Underworld films. In the Charlie and Lola books and TV series, Soren Lorensen is little Lola’s imaginary friend. If these namesakes seem a bit lightweight, Søren Kierkegaard was a 19th century philosopher and theologian who has been enormously influential in shaping our ideas of the self and subjectivity. It’s pronounced SOH-ren.

Other Scandinavian names: Anders, Thor

Titan

According to Greek mythology, the Titans were a race of gods that ruled in the legendary Golden Age. They were the Elder Gods who were overthrown by the Olympians; this myth of a “war in heaven”, where one group of gods replaces another, exists in many cultures across Europe and the Middle East. The meaning of their name is uncertain, but is often intepreteted as “to stretch”; the Greek poet Hesiod refers to them as “the Stretchers”, because they stretched out their power. Other scholars believe it comes from the Greek for “white earth, white clay, gypsum”; they believe that this white dust was used in ancient shamanistic rituals, and it is from these almost-forgotten rites that the myth of the Titans grew. The name has been given to a moon of Saturn, and inspired the name of the element, titanium. The Titans, often imagined as gigantic figures, are part of popular culture, and you may find Titans in comic books, science fiction movies, and video games, as well as sports teams – including the Gold Coast Titans. Although the name may seem too big for a little boy, it sounds similar to names such as Tate, Tyrone and Titus.

Other Greek names: Constandinos, Eugene, Leonidas, Orion

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