How popular is the baby name Maria 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 Maria.
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According to data released on June 22nd by Spain’s Instituto Nacional de Estadistica, the most popular baby names in Spain in 2016 were (again) Lucia and Hugo.
Here are Spain’s top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2016:
According to data from the Gesellschaft für deutsche Sprache (the Association for German Language), the most popular baby names in Germany in 2016 were Sophia/Sofia and Jonas.
Here are the country’s top 10 girl names and top 10 boy names of 2016:
Girl Names 1. Sophia/Sofia (was 4th) 2. Emma (was 2nd) 3. Hanna/Hannah (same rank) 4. Mia (was 1st) 5. Emilia (was 6th) 6. Anna (was 5th) 7. Mila (same) 8. Lea/Leah (was 8th) 9. Lena (was 10th) 10. Marie (was 11th)
Boy Names 1. Jonas (same rank) 2. Elias (was 8th) 3. Ben (same rank) 4. Leon/Léon (was 5th) 5. Luca/Luka (was 4th) 6. Noah/Noa (was 10th) 7. Paul (was 11th) 8. Louis/Luis (was 6th) 9. Luke/Lucas (was 7th) 10. Finn/Fynn (was 13th)
On the girls’ side, Marie replaced Lina.
On the boys’ side, Paul and Finn/Fynn replaced Felix and Maximilian (which dropped from 2nd to 11th).
According to data from the government of Romania, the most popular baby names in the country last year were Maria and Andrei.
Here are Romania’s top girl names and top boy names of 2016:
Girl names
Maria
Elena
Ioana
Andreea
Boy names
Andrei
David
Alexandru
Stefan
One of my sources quoted Romanian sociologist Alfred Bulai as saying that the Russian baby name Nadia — otherwise rare in Romania — saw a big spike in usage in the ’70s thanks to Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci.
A law enacted in 2009 prohibits Romanian parents from bestowing baby names that are defamatory, “ridiculous,” or that refer to objects or places.
The curious name Rise debuted in the Social Security Administration data in 1942:
1944: 13 baby girls named Rise
1943: 7 baby girls named Rise
1942: 15 baby girls named Rise [debut]
1941: unlisted
1940: unlisted
“Rise”? Huh.
Rise was the 4th-most-popular debut name that year, and not far behind (in 7th place) was the somewhat similar Risa:
1944: 12 baby girls named Risa
1943: 5 baby girls named Risa
1942: 12 baby girls named Risa [debut]
1941: unlisted
1940: unlisted
Later in the ’40s, names like Reesa and Rissa popped up. And in the ’50s, names like Riesa and Reisa appeared. So there was definitely a minor Ris– trend going on in the mid-20th century, with “Rise” being the unlikely top variant.
But because “Rise” is also a vocabulary word, I had no luck pinning down the source. (It’s ridiculously hard to research word-names on the internet. I’m still stumped on Memory and Treasure.) Eventually I gave up.
Years later, as I was grabbing an image for the Finesse post, the answer landed right in front of me in the form of a cigarette ad:
Risë Stevens in a cigarette ad
The full-page advertisement for Camels from a 1953 issue of LIFE magazine featured a “lovely star of the Metropolitan Opera” named Risë Stevens. I knew right away that this glamorous-looking lady — and her diaeresis! — was the solution to the “Rise” puzzle.
Mezzo-soprano Risë Stevens was born Risë Steenberg in New York City in 1913. Her first name is pronounced REE-sah or REE-suh. Here’s how she explained it:
“It’s Norwegian; it was my grandmother’s name and my great-grandmother’s name. In school I was called everything but Rise; I was called Rose; I was called Rise {rhyming with “eyes”}; I was called Risé {rhyming with “play”}; even Teresa. In school, it was terrible; I would have arguments with the teachers. I would say, ‘I should know how to pronounce my own name.'”
(One source suggests that the name Risë is related to the Latin word risus, meaning “laughter.”)
So what was an opera singer doing in a national advertising campaign? Shouldn’t those be reserved for Hollywood stars? Well, turns out she was a Hollywood star — at least for a time. She sang professionally from the mid-1930s to the mid-1960s, but in the early 1940s she gave acting a shot.
Her first film, released in late 1941, was the musical The Chocolate Soldier. Notice how her dots were left off the movie poster:
This film accounts for the 1942 debut of both “Rise” and the phonetic respelling Risa.
Risë Stevens ultimately left Hollywood and returned to the opera — and she managed to bring at least a portion of her movie audience with her:
“I probably would never have reached that vast public had I not done films,” she said. “At least, I won a lot of people over to opera.”
This explains why Risë Stevens, often called the greatest Carmen of her generation, was being featured in advertisements and on television talk shows more than a decade later. And why her unique name therefore saw peak usage in the 1950s.
If you want to know more about Risë (and hear her sing!) here’s a Risë Stevens Tribute video created by the National Endowment for the Arts.
P.S. Risë Stevens had a granddaughter named Marisa — a combination of the names of her grandmothers, Maria and Risë. Risë Stevens’ son told her that he went with the -a ending instead of the -ë ending because he was “not going to put her through what you’ve been through.”
Second image: Clipping from Life magazine (9 Feb. 1953)
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