The name Keniel is curiously popular in Puerto Rico. In fact, Keniel has been one of the top 100 names for baby boys born in Puerto Rico since 2005.
Despite being roughly 100 times larger than PR in terms of population, the U.S. currently has less than half the number of Keniels:
Year | Keniels born in U.S. | Keniels born in PR |
---|---|---|
2015 | 24 (7 in FL) | 66 (ranked 31st) |
2014 | 23 (8 in FL) | 74 (ranked 31st) |
2013 | 25 (5 in FL, 5 in PA, 6 in NY) | 95 (ranked 18th) |
2012 | 18 (5 in FL) | 103 (ranked 23rd) |
2011 | 15 (5 in FL) | 94 (ranked 28th) |
2010 | 18 (7 in FL) | 65 (ranked 60th) |
2009 | 8 | 86 (ranked 51st) |
The U.S. states with the most Keniels also have particularly large Puerto Rican populations, which isn’t surprising.
We see the same pattern with the double-n version Kenniel:
Year | Kenniels born in U.S. | Kenniels born in PR |
---|---|---|
2015 | 17 (6 in FL) | not in top 100 |
2014 | 13 | 39 (ranked 83rd) |
2013 | 8 | 38 (ranked 87th) |
2012 | 6 | 38 (ranked 96th) |
2011 | 7 | 39 (ranked 96th) |
2010 | fewer than 5 | not in top 100 |
And a similar pattern may emerge for Kendriel, which was new to both the U.S. and the PR lists in 2015:
Year | Kendriels born in U.S. | #Kendriels born in PR |
---|---|---|
2015 | 8 | 41 (ranked 68th) |
2014 | fewer than 5 | not in top 100 |
I should mention that nontraditional –iel names (like Abdiel, Jadiel, Yeriel, Joniel and Yandiel) have been fashionable in Puerto Rico lately. So Keniel is certainly a part of a larger trend.
But Keniel’s recent rise has me wondering: Was something specific drawing attention to the name in the early 2000s?
Any thoughts/ideas?
Source: SSA (U.S., Puerto Rico)