By Abby Sandel
Are you ready to go back to Hogwarts?
On July 31st, the eighth installment in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, will be released. A two-part stage play based on the story debuted in London’s West End earlier this summer.
Thanks to a successful #KeeptheSecrets campaign, there’s been little coverage of the new adventures for Harry, Hermione, and Ron, but we do know that all three characters return – along with many of our other favorites.
We’ll meet their children, too. The next generation was introduced briefly in Book Seven’s epilogue, so no spoilers here.
Instead, let’s look at – what else! – the Harry Potter baby names that have caught on (or not) in the nineteen years since we first met an eleven-year-old wizard named Harry Potter.
Heroic Kingsley Shacklebolt first appeared in the same book. Kingsley has since climbed to Number 747.
Both names are significant. Albus was named for legendary Hogwarts headmaster, Albus Dumbledore. Scorpius’s celestial name comes from a constellation, just like dad.
Neither name has seen much use in the real world.
Sirius Black, is Draco‘s cousin and Harry’s godfather. As with Draco, a few parents quickly adopted the star name for their sons.
While Draco and Sirius remain well outside of the US Top 1000, they’re at their most popular in 2016.
Cedric Diggory competed against Harry in Book Four. Despite the character’s appeal, it’s one of the Harry Potter names that hasn’t become more common.
Garrick is even more obscure. The given name of Mr. Ollivander, Diagon Alley’s storied wandmaker, Garrick is a rarity with some history, briefly popular from the 1960s into the 1990s.
Dozens and dozens of other rarities are mentioned throughout the soon-to-be eight-book series.
There’s also Ginevra, better known as Ginny. The Italian form of Guinevere was extinct in the US before Harry Potter. The future Mrs. Potter has a starring role beginning with Book Two, published in 1998, though her name remains rare.
Fans of the series might also think of Victoire, daughter of Bill and Fleur Weasley. Her name, the French form of Victoria, honors her date of birth – the anniversary of the Battle of Hogwarts.
As for Hermione, how can it be that the brave and brilliant witch hasn’t inspired more namesakes? Long before JK Rowling, Shakespeare used the name for a character. It has increased in use modestly since 1997, though it remains well outside the US Top 1000.
Lucius Malfoy is another villain, dad to Draco. Similar to popular boy names Luke, Lucas, and Luca, Lucius has been gaining in use since the Harry Potter series’ early days. Now there’s another fictional character by the name: Empire’s patriarch, Lucious Lyon.
Hogwarts professor Sybill Trelawney was introduced in 1999. Since then, another British phenomenon emerged: Downton Abbey. The youngest Crawley sister and eldest Crawley grandchild were both named Sybil. The name remains outside of the US Top 1000, but has risen steadily – probably thanks to the latter; it’s Number 291 on Nameberry..
Then there’s George, one of Ron‘s mischievous brothers. While the name George has risen in recent years, magic is not the explanation. This time it is all about the 2013 birth of Prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge, future King of England.
Harry is an everyman name, accessible and informal. Already popular in the UK prior to the first book’s release, Harry became the country’s Number One name, and has charted in the Top Ten most years since the series began.
In the US, Harry has never recovered from its peak in the late nineteenth century, though Harrison and Henry are quite popular. Still, the release of Book Eight creates another opportunity for parents to reconsider the name.
Other traditional names from the books that have fared well in recent years include several Weasley family members, like dad Arthur and brother Charlie.
The breakout star of the new book might be Rose. The brilliant Rose Granger-Weasley is a Hogwarts student in the new installment, classmate of Albus and Scorpius. An early twentieth century favorite, the flower power name has risen steadily in recent years. One more admirable Rose might be all it takes to push this name back into the Top 100.
What are your favorite Harry Potter names? Would you consider any of them for a child?