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Downton Abbey Names?

91 replies

Grandhighpoohba · 04/01/2012 12:12

So do we reckon that Mary, Edith and Sybil are going to have a resurgence then?

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EcoLady · 07/01/2012 11:18

Lavinia is a pretty name, but she'd get called variations on 'Lavatory' at school.

issynoko · 07/01/2012 12:30

I am thinking of naming my son Mrs Patmore. I just love Downton names.

issynoko · 07/01/2012 12:31

3 of my children have Downton names actually - all from before bloody Downton was written. And all below stairs. Will have to have another one and call it something posh.

birdsofshoreandsea · 07/01/2012 12:34

This reply has been deleted

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marsiay · 07/01/2012 12:38

www.babynology.com/meaning-abbey-f24.html

staranise · 07/01/2012 17:09

My daughter is called Edith (rarely 'Edie') and she's 5.5 - I've only met one other little girl called Edith and she's the smae age as DD - I hadn't even made the Downtown connection so we're ahead of the curve. However, I was reading Julian Fellowes' book 'Snobs' when I was pregnant and the main character (not particularly nice) is called Edith so I was inspired by the creater of Downton I guess, though we chose it because it's a very old Anglo-Saxon name (pretentious, moi?!). I like most of those Edwardian names but not Sybil (though isn't it originally Greek?) - too much Fawlty Towers.

everlong · 07/01/2012 20:32

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ja99 · 07/01/2012 21:21

We have a pre-DA Anna and a new Edith who we're calling Edie. Hadn't made the DA connection with either name til finding this thread, now slightly concerned my Edie will be one of 10 in her class in years to c

ja99 · 07/01/2012 21:27

Oops - fat fingers on iPhone syndrome. .... In years to come, I was trying to say. But honestly, what's the alternative? Call them unfashionable names (any recent Sharons/ Pamelas out there?) safe in the knowledge they'll be unique?
Have discovered Edith to be a Marmite name with extreme reactions both ways; Anna much 'safer'.

shipsladyg · 08/01/2012 06:20

Anyone else slightly disturbed that Julian Fellowes of all people is influencing our choice of baby names???? Shock Wink

exoticfruits · 08/01/2012 07:25

Not in the least-I don't think that he has any influence. Mary and Edith are already making a comeback and I doubt whether the rest will.

seeker · 08/01/2012 08:02

Have I missed something?

Ponders · 08/01/2012 12:47

I know a family with a Mary & an Edith, both around 20 now

They were way ahead of the game Grin

N1MTB · 09/01/2012 17:06

Yup - our DD was an Edith before DA - as was the other Edith I know. And one of our DD's middle names is Violet. Actually - her other middle name is was pretty popular in Edwardian times too. (Anglo Saxon though.) (Our children have two middle names each - aim was to keep both sides of our family happy... long story. But DH's mother's middle name was Violet and, very sadly, she died before we had children. Afraid we didn't like her first name...)

But we can't claim to be original - old lady names have been a trend for at least 12 years I reckon.... (or 36 years if you are my mother - but she's just eccentric ;) ).

Ponders - you are original though!

Julian Fellowes is just jumping on the zeitgeist (?). Fashions for names always go in cycles though I suppose.

Totally agree Edith is a Marmite name. DH and I had long discussions - he loved it until he asked what people (laddy blokes) at work thought about it. He likes Edie though. I love both. (And won paper scissors stone when we had to decide.)

(Love Mary too, BTW - but can't use it as DH's family use it to describe women's bits...! Most odd...)

ukulelelady · 14/01/2012 22:30

Old fashioned names are definately on the rise i've recently met a 2 yr old Gwen and a 3 yr old Edith except she couldn't say it properly and told me her name was "EdiFF", very cute.

SlinkingOutsideInSocks · 14/01/2012 22:56

See, I would class Violet and Pearl as dreadful, why-choose-those-when-there's-so-many-lovely-girls'-names names - they make me think of Beryl Cook ladies - matronly, mono-bosomed, frumpy and, err, fuller-figured... In fact, I'd lump the name Beryl in with them. And as for Florence, I just do not get the fuss over it at all.

Edith is infinitely nicer.

All a matter of personal taste - luckily we don't all like the same names, or it would be a very boring world indeed!

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