How popular is the baby name Patricia 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 Patricia.
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In 1961, Patricia Huckett of London decided to name her daughter Princess.
Officials tried to dissuade her, telling her that “Princess” was a title, not a name. But they could find no law against it, and she insisted, so the baby was named Princess Huckett.
Mrs. Huckett said she got the idea from her father.
“He said he knew a chap with the Christian name Lord. When they went on a plane to Switzerland, everybody was fussing around this chap.”
“At work they’ve all started calling me King Huckett,” noted Princess’s father.
Source: “Want to be a princess? It’s possible.” Tuscaloosa News 21 Aug. 1961: 3.
I recently came across a BBC article that described how the Norman Conquest drastically changed naming practices in England. Anglo-Saxon names like Aethelred, Eadric, and Leofric were soon replaced by Norman names like William, Robert, and Henry following the 11th-century invasion, which was led by William the Conqueror.
Here’s a quote from the article by English historian Robert Bartlett:
The ruling elite set the fashion and soon William was the most common male name in England, even among peasants. A lot of people changed their names because they wanted to pass in polite society – they didn’t want to be mistaken for a peasant, marked out with an Anglo-Saxon name.
And here are some more details regarding the names, from a later article in The Telegraph:
In Peter Ackroyd’s Foundation, the author notes that on an English farm in 1114 the workers were listed as being called Soen, Rainald, Ailwin, Lemar, Godwin, Ordric, Alric, Saroi, Ulviet and Ulfac. By the end of the century all these names had disappeared.
Because the Normans had conquered England half a century earlier, all these men were easily identifiable as Anglo-Saxons just by their names.
[…]
Of the old English names, only Alfred, Edmund, Edwin and Edgar survived, while Edward thrived, largely thanks to the cult of Edward the Confessor.
The author also mentioned that, per Ackroyd, “a boy from Whitby was recorded as changing his name from Tostig to William because he was being bullied” at the beginning of the 12th century.
And, in case you were wondering about female names, here’s a quote by English historian David Hey:
After the Norman Conquest the personal names that had been popular with the Anglo-Saxons and the Vikings fell out of favour. Some of the names favoured by the Normans were female equivalents of male names, e.g. Joan, Jane, Janet from John, or Patricia, Petra, and Paula from Patrick, Peter, and Paul. Others were biblical names or the names of saints. Joan and Agnes were first recorded in England in 1189, Catherine in 1196, Mary in 1203, Elizabeth in 1205, and Anne in 1218.
Two more female names favored by the Normans were Alice and Matilda.
The baby name Tanoa has appeared in the U.S. baby name data just twice, both times in the early 1960s:
1963: 5 baby girls named Tanoa
1962: unlisted
1961: 6 baby girls named Tanoa [debut]
1960: unlisted
1959: unlisted
Where did it come from?
The TV western Tales of Wells Fargo (1957-1962).
An hour-long episode that aired on Oct. 28, 1961, featured a female character named Tanoa (played by actress Patricia Michon). In fact, the episode itself was called “Tanoa.”
In the episode, main character Jim Hardie (who worked for Wells Fargo) and his assistant Beau McCloud negotiated a new stagecoach route with some local Native Americans. According to one synopsis (from contemporary TV listings), “Beau McCloud rescues an Indian girl and her little brother from a power-hungry war chief.”
The cute name Adeva was a one-hit wonder in the U.S. baby name data in the early 1990s:
1994: unlisted
1993: unlisted
1992: 5 baby girls named Adeva [debut]
1991: unlisted
1990: unlisted
Where did it come from?
American singer Adeva (born Patricia Daniels), who put out dance tracks in the late ’80s and early ’90s.
Though her albums sold better overseas than they did in the U.S., several of her singles became popular in U.S. dance clubs. Her most successful song (in the U.S.) was “It Should Have Been Me,” which ranked #1 on Billboard‘s Dance Club Songs chart during the last two weeks of 1991.
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