How popular is the baby name Aenor in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Aenor.

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Popularity of the baby name Aenor


Posts that mention the name Aenor

What turned Alias into a baby name in 1971?

The characters Kid Curry and Hannibal Heyes from the TV series "Alias Smith and Jones" (1971-1973)
Kid Curry and Hannibal Heyes

Curiously, the word Alias — which refers to an assumed name — became a name itself in the early 1970s, when it popped up for the first time in the U.S. baby name data:

  • 1973: 5 baby boys named Alias
  • 1972: 6 baby boys named Alias
  • 1971: 7 baby boys named Alias [debut]
  • 1970: unlisted
  • 1969: unlisted

What put it there?

The TV western Alias Smith and Jones, which premiered on ABC in 1971 and lasted until 1973.

The lead characters were a pair of former outlaws trying to reform, so they used aliases:

  • Hannibal Heyes (played initially by actor Pete Duel) went by “Joshua Smith”
  • Jedediah “Kid” Curry (played by actor Ben Murphy) went by “Thaddeus Jones”

To be clear, none of the show’s characters were actually named Alias. The show’s title did make the word seem like a name, though, and that made all the difference.

Title of the TV series "Alias Smith and Jones" (1971-1973)
“Alias Smith and Jones”

The English word alias ultimately comes from the Latin word alius, meaning “other” or “another.”

This makes the rare name Alias a distant cousin of the more familiar name Eleanor. How? Because the name Eleanor evolved out of the Occitan phrase alia Aenor, meaning “other Aenor.” (The very first Eleanor, Aliénor d’Aquitaine, was the daughter of a woman named Aenor, and hence she was the other Aenor.)

So…if your real name was Alias, would you use it, or would you go by an alias? :)

Sources: Alias – Online Etymology Dictionary, Alias Smith and Jones – Wikipedia, Eleanor – Behind the Name

Baby name story: Elora

Cliff at Elora Gorge
Cliff at Elora Gorge

While I was putting together yesterday’s list of girl names outside the top 1,000, I spotted the name Elora, and I was reminded of this story.

Several years ago, Toronto couple Elaine Yuen and Kevin Shimmin welcomed a baby girl. They named the baby Elora after the Elora Gorge in Ontario, Canada.

The name paid tribute to Elaine’s “fond memories of hiking at the gorge.” She also liked that Elora began with El- (like her own name), and that it was “a short form of Elnora, derived from Eleanor, which means light.”

(Actually, the name of gorge comes from the name of a town, which comes from the name of a ship, which comes from the name of the Ellora Caves in India. Also, incidentally, Eleanor is more likely to derive from the name Alienor, meaning “the other Aenor,” than the name Helen, meaning “torch.”)

In any case…Elora Gorge Conservation Area superintendent Dan Morden said that, as far as he knew, Elaine’s Elora was the first baby to be named after the gorge.

Sources:

  • Rushowy, Kristin. “Beautiful place, beautiful baby.” Toronto Star 26 Jul. 2008.
  • Connon, John. The Early History of Elora, Ontario and Vicinity. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1974.

Image: Adapted from Elora Gorge Cliff Face by Kalejade under CC BY-SA 4.0.