How popular is the baby name Julia 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 Julia.

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Popularity of the baby name Julia


Posts that mention the name Julia

What gave the baby name Ena a boost in 1906?

Princess Ena (Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg)
Princess Ena

The baby name Ena saw its highest-ever usage in the U.S. in the early 1900s:

  • 1908: 27 baby girls named Ena [rank: 748th]
  • 1907: 52 baby girls named Ena [rank: 497th]
  • 1906: 89 baby girls named Ena [rank: 352nd] – peak usage
  • 1905: 16 baby girls named Ena [rank: 940th]
  • 1904: 8 baby girls named Ena

It was the fastest-rising baby name of 1906, in fact.

What was drawing so much attention to the name Ena around that time?

Princess Ena of England, who married King Alfonso of Spain on the last day of May, 1906.

The wedding got a lot more media attention than it otherwise would have because, after the wedding ceremony, a Spanish anarchist tried to assassinate the couple. (He threw a bomb concealed in a bouquet of flowers at the royal procession.) Ena and Alfonso were uninjured, but over a dozen were killed and many more were wounded.

Though she was called “Princess Ena” in the newspapers and simply “Ena” by family members, her name at birth was actually Victoria Eugenie Julia Ena. Not only that, but the name “Ena” itself may have been unintentional:

[T]here are differing accounts of that name’s origin, with some stating that it was chosen by her grandmother as ‘a Gaelic Highland name’ to mark the first royal birth in Scotland since the seventeenth century, and other accounts putting the name down to a misreading of her mother’s writing of the name ‘Eva’. Queen Victoria’s journal entry for the occasion of her christening lists the names as ‘Victora, Eugénie, Julia, Eva’.

What are your thoughts on the baby name Ena? Would you choose it over Eva?

Sources: Victoria Eugenie – Wikipedia, Christening of Princess Victoria Eugenie – Royal Collection Trust, SSA

Image: Adapted from Queen Victoria Eugenia of Spain by Kaulak (public domain)

Popular baby names in Spain, 2018

Flag of Spain
Flag of Spain

According to Spain’s Instituto Nacional de Estadistica, the most popular baby names in the country in 2018 were Lucia and Hugo.

Here are Spain’s top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2018:

Girl Names

  1. Lucia, 4,004 baby girls
  2. Sofia, 3,701
  3. Martina, 3,534
  4. Maria, 3,533
  5. Paula, 2,847
  6. Julia, 2,738
  7. Emma, 2,623
  8. Valeria, 2,520
  9. Daniela, 2,503
  10. Alba, 2,350

Boy Names

  1. Hugo, 3,800 baby boys
  2. Lucas, 3,617
  3. Martin, 3,332
  4. Daniel, 3,223
  5. Pablo, 3,139
  6. Mateo, 3,100
  7. Alejandro, 3,000
  8. Leo, 2,651
  9. Alvaro, 2,495
  10. Manuel, 2,476

In the boys’ top 10, Leo replaced Adrian.

The girls’ top 10 includes the same names, but in a different order.

In 2017, the top names were Lucia and Lucas.

Source: What is the frequency of a first name of newborns? – INEbase

Image: Adapted from Flag of Spain (public domain)

Where did the baby name Shakira come from in the 1970s?

Shakira Baksh and Michael Caine (in 1973)
Shakira Baksh and Michael Caine (in 1973)

These days, when you say the name Shakira, most people think of the Colombian singer (“Hips Don’t Lie”) who became famous in the U.S. in the early 2000s. In fact, the name saw peak usage in 2002 thanks to her.

But the Arabic name Shakira (which means “thankful”) first caught the attention of America’s expectant parents decades earlier:

  • 1973: 74 baby girls named Shakira
  • 1972: 20 baby girls named Shakira
  • 1971: 7 baby girls named Shakira
  • 1970: 12 baby girls named Shakira [debut]
  • 1969: unlisted
  • 1968: unlisted

Why?

Because of Shakira Baksh (later known as Shakira Caine).

She was born and raised in British Guiana to Muslim Indian parents who had relocated from the Kashmir region of British India.

In 1967, she won the Miss Guyana contest and placed third in the Miss World contest in London. Following that, she became a London-based model and actress.

In early 1970, a photograph of Shakira was published in Parade (the Sunday newspaper magazine distributed in U.S. papers nationwide). Below the photo was a short article:

Ever since Diahann Carroll hit it big in the “Julia” TV series, television producers the world ever have been scouting for other talented black beauties to star in a weekly program.

In England, Shakira Baksh, 22, who came to London from Guyana in 1967 as contender in the Miss World beauty contest, has just been signed in a new and as yet unfilled weekly series.

The objective in starring Shakira is to attract a large share of the non-white TV audience.

Right on cue, Shakira’s name debuted in the U.S. baby name data.

Shakira Baksh never had a weekly TV show, but she did star in various TV commercials — including one for Maxwell House coffee that English actor Michael Caine (star of Alfie) happened to see. He was so impressed by Shakira’s beauty that he tracked her down and asked her out.

Shakira and Michael Caine (in 1976)
Shakira and Michael Caine (in 1976)

The couple got married in January of 1973, and we see a corresponding increase in the usage of her name the same year.

They went on to appear together in the movie The Man Who Would Be King (in 1975) and on the cover of People magazine (in 1976).

What are your thoughts on the name Shakira?

Sources:

Images: Clippings from Time magazine (15 Jan. 1973) and the cover of People magazine (1 Mar. 1976)

Popular baby names in the Netherlands, 2018

Flag of the Netherlands
Flag of the Netherlands

According to the Netherlands’ Sociale Verzekeringsbank (SVB), the most popular baby names in the country in 2018 were Julia and Lucas.

Here are the Netherlands’ top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2018:

Girl Names (“Meisjesnamen”)
1. Julia, 797 baby girls
2. Emma, 704
3. Sophie, 677
4. Tess, 669
5. Zoë, 659
6. Mila, 632
7. Anna, 550
8. Sara, 541
9. Eva, 530
10. Noor & Nora, 516 each (tie)

Boy Names (“Jongensnamen”)
1. Lucas, 681 baby boys
2. Levi, 641
3. Finn, 634
4. Sem, 633
5. Noah, 624
6. Daan, 619
7. Luuk, 596
8. Bram, 571
9. Mees, 568
10. Milan, 558

In the girls’ top 10, Noor and Nora replaced Evi.

In the boys’ top 10, Mees (a diminutive form of Bartholomeus) replaced Jesse.

In 2017, the top two names were Emma and Noah.

Sources: De populairste meisjesnamen van 2018, De populairste jongensnamen van 2018

Image: Adapted from Flag of the Netherlands (public domain)