Baby name consultation: Biblical and/or first-millennium Saint’s name needed

This past February Pope Francis and Kirill, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia met in Cuba, a meeting which was called “the first in history.” Though Kirill doesn’t speak for the whole of the Eastern Orthodox Church (being that the Eastern Orthodox Church is a group of self-governing churches in communion [including the Greek Orthodox Church and the Russian Orthodox Church], though without a single head — different than the Roman Catholic set-up with the pope as head), he’s certainly an important figure in Eastern Orthodoxy, and, movingly, in Francis and Kirill’s Joint Declaration they said,

It is with joy that we have met like brothers in the Christian faith who encounter one another “to speak face to face” (2 Jn 12), from heart to heart … With grace–filled gratitude for the gift of mutual understanding manifested during our meeting, let us with hope turn to the Most Holy Mother of God, invoking her with the words of this ancient prayer: “We seek refuge under the protection of your mercy, Holy Mother of God”. May the Blessed Virgin Mary, through her intercession, inspire fraternity in all those who venerate her …

When today’s mama — who’s Eastern Orthodox — emailed me for a consultation, I felt a similar joy and gratitude and “heart to heart” connection, as I do with all of you who love the names of our faith! ❤

This was a new kind of challenge for me, as I’m most confident with Roman Catholic saints and naming practices, both of which are sometimes somewhat different in the Eastern Orthodox church. Fortunately the mama, Arielle, was eager to help, explaining:

We are Eastern Orthodox, and our naming conventions are a bit different. These are not hard and fast rules, but in general, a child is given the first name of a saint, and this name is very liturgically important – they are ceremonially named on the eighth day of life, they are baptized with that name, the priest gives them communion by name each week, they are married with that name, etc. If for some reason they are NOT given a saint’s name (some people give their child a family name or just a name they have always liked), they still receive a saint’s name at baptism for all those liturgical uses, so in practice they have two names (or their middle name is their saint’s name). Which works for some, but we like to avoid that and give all of our children their saint’s name as their first name. Children do not choose a confirmation saint (they are confirmed at baptism), so this is the only saint’s name they get, unless they are ordained or tonsured.

It also is conventionally the saint’s actual name – not a place related to it (like Avila would be). Marian title names are a possibility (like Despina, Panagiotis). Translations of the name are fine (John/Johan/Ioannis/Evan/Ivan or Mary/Miriam/Maria/Mariam for instance), as are names related to major feasts – Evangelia/Evangeline would be named for the Annunciation, for instance, or Theophania would be named for Theophany (Epiphany in the West).”

It’s also really helpful that we share all the saints canonized before 1054, including Biblical saints, so:

Many names are shared (like Catherine would be for Catherine of Alexandria, instead of Catherine of Siena) but others, like Claire are not, without a real stretch (like Claire for Photini – similar meaning).”

It was easy enough to focus on those shared names, and fun to be challenged in a new way!

Arielle and her husband aren’t currently expecting, but they’re planning ahead for the possibility of Baby #5 (as she said, “I also really wanted to ask you about #4, but she was born before I got to it!“). Their kiddos’ names are:

James Benedict (“James is named for his grandfathers and for St. James the Brother of the Lord (Iakovos). Benedict is for St. Benedict of Nursia. I like the idea of including names from among the ‘Western saints’ (Benedict, Ambrose, Augustine, Brigid, Genevieve, etc.) as a nod to the fact that while we are of the Eastern Church, we are of Western heritage.”)

Miriam Anna (“Miriam Anna is named for the Theotokos (Blessed Mother) and the grandmother of Christ, who we always call St. Anna.”)

Sophia Catherine (“Sophia Catherine is named for St. Sophia of Thrace, the Mother of Orphans, and St. Catherine of Alexandria. Both are a nod to my husband, who studied ancient Greek and Roman history and philosophy. [Sophia = wisdom, St. Catherine studied Greek rhetoric and philosophy]. He also stayed at St. Catherine’s monastery in Sinai, and we have both been to the top of Mt. Sinai where her body was taken by angels.”)

Elisabeth Eleni (“Elisabeth Eleni is for St. Elizabeth the Grand Duchess of Russia, a nun martyred by the Bolsheviks. Eleni is a common Greek form of Helen, the Finder of the True Cross. I used the “s” spelling both because I just think it is beautiful and elegant, and because our last name is very German and I wanted to use the nickname Elsa (which we do). I’m not sure I love that I mixed languages here.”)

I just love all these names! I love that they’re obviously faithy, and I love their really elegant feel. I also love how Arielle said they “like the idea of including names from among the “Western saints” (Benedict, Ambrose, Augustine, Brigid, Genevieve, etc.) as a nod to the fact that while we are of the Eastern Church, we are of Western heritage.”

A few other considerations:

I love names that are Scandinavian or German forms of saints’ names, but am rather conservative when it comes to names that seem too ‘weird’ or ‘harsh’ for English-speaking ears. I would love more ideas here. I also love saints’ names from the British Isles (my heritage), especially Irish names, many of which are pre-1054 saints.

Probably no more ‘J’ names, as our last name starts with ‘J’ and one is enough. Possibly for a middle name (I like Joseph and Jude). I like that no one has the same first initial yet, but that’s not a deal-breaker. I love names that start with ‘E.’

Names they’re considering for a girl include:

Lydia (“current front runner. I love the musical sound of the name, and love that when we shorten the names of the girls it fits right in (Miri, Sophie, Elsie, Lydie!) Downside – we know a lot about our other childrens’ saints, and not a lot is known about St. Lydia. It also doesn’t mean much linguistically – just “from Lydia.” Not sure about a middle name here – Lydia Grace? Lydia Mirabel/Mirabelle? Lydia Genevieve? We love St. Genevieve, and it is the name of my great-great-grandmother. But I’m not sure that suits the musicality of the name“)

Emmelia (“one of my all time favorite saints, St. Emmelia the mother of five saints. I had to do some linguistic research for this one (I mean *ahem* have my husband do it). She is clearly a Greek-speaking saint, and so the common explanation that it is from the same root as Emily didn’t make sense. Turns out it is from a Greek word for “melodious.” I love Emmelia Rose together. Only downside is that it is so close to the common Emily, and might get pronounced like Amelia. Which is a lovely name, but different.”)

Brigid
Theodora
Anysia
Seraphina
Tamsin
Zoë
Naomi
Matea

And for boys:

We have a hard time agreeing on boys’ names. Husband chose James really on his own (I wanted Benedict as a first name) and now he really wants a Thomas, so Thomas Ambrose has been on the list. I like that it goes well with James Benedict (Apostle + Western saint). I like Brendan Thomas better. We would like to include Matthew in a boy’s name at some point, for a dear friend who died.”

Others:

Brendan
Matthias
Sebastian
Evan
Martin
Basil
Cyprian
Gabriel
Silas
Felix
Elias
Ciaran

Names that they  like, but probably won’t use include:

Annelise (“love, but already have an Anna and Elisabeth, so seems repetitive“)

Madeleine (“Also love, especially as it goes with the French spelling of Elisabeth, but so very common. We have several little friends named Magdalene (called Maggie), so that version is out“)

Mirabelle/Mirabel (“maybe for a middle, but way to close to Miriam for a first“)

Lucia (“loved, but then a niece got it!“)

Nina

Finally,

What do you think? Is this too far outside your expertise? I LOVE your site and would love to hear what you think! I feel like I’ve had the same list of names since I was a teenager and have a hard time thinking outside the box for others.

One very specific thing I could still use help with is a Scandinavian- or German-sounding name that could be a sub for Lydia. I do love Lydia. But I feel like there might be a name I’m not thinking of that goes well with sister Elsa and has that sweet musical sound and Scandi feeling. Annelise fits that bill for me, but just doesn’t go with Elisabeth/Elsa because of being the same base name!

Whew! All so interesting, right?! Okay, so first, some thoughts on Arielle and her hubs’ current ideas:

Lydia’s one of my favorite names! It’s true that its meaning is not terribly inspiring, but I’ve always loved that Lydia was a seller of purple cloth—it’s not often that a little girl has her very own color! I like how Lydia Grace and Lydia Mirabel(le) sound together, and funny enough I kind of agree about Lydia Genevieve—they’re two gorgeous names, but they don’t sound totally right together … From their girl list, I love how Lydia Magdalene and Lydia Madeleine sound. And Lydie’s one of my favorite favorite nicknames, love love love! It is true that something like Lydia Madeleine/Magdalene technically means “from Lydia + from Magdalene” but I have never really focused on the meanings of names, because they don’t tell the whole story (although I do admit that more recently, a great meaning can sway me to like a name I might not otherwise like). Lydia to me doesn’t mean “from Lydia,” it means “St. Paul’s first European convert, the lady in the Bible who sold purple cloth.” You know? Lydia Madeleine would say to me “gorgeous New Testament name (with her own color!) plus a feminine French middle that has connections to some great, holy women.” I think of names like Francis (“Frenchman”) and Cecilia (“blind”) and Blaise (“lisping”) and even Mary (whose meaning is debated, but I usually see “bitter” and some think maybe also “rebellious”) and those meanings are definitely not what people think of when they hear the names, you know? (Arielle’s email was actually one of the inspirations behind my piece at CatholicMom on name meanings!)

It’s also kind of cool that Lydia and Magdalene are two female biblical names that describe where the women were from — it’s kind of apt to pair them together! And place names are all the rage anyway, so Lydia and Magdalene/Madeleine are way ahead of the curve — place names used before any of the Dakotas or Brooklyns or Parises. 🙂

But, all that said, they could play with the meaning of Lydia in terms of connecting to the middle for a meaningful phrase … like Bebinn/Bebhinn/Bevin (and even sometimes anglicized as Vivian!) is apparently Irish for “fair lady,” so something like Lydia Bebhinn could mean “fair lady from Lydia” altogether, which nods directly to Lydia in the bible both by using her name and describing her? Or Lydia Madonna, where Madonna means “my lady” in Italian (and has the awesome Marian significance. But then, Madonna. I do think it works as a middle name though!). Or Lydia Matrona, where Matrona means “lady”in late Latin and was the name of some early saints! (Matryona in Russian, pretty!)

As for some other names that make me think of a Scandi Lydia because of their sound, I wonder what Arielle and her hubs would think of: Linnea, Livia, Tilda, Mila, Lovisa/Louisa? St. Matilda of Saxony and St. Louis of Cordoba make the cut date-wise … Linnea’s not a saint’s name and Livia (St. Agostina Petrantoni) is post 1054, but maybe they’d like them enough to use them as non-saint names? Mila’s a great one I think — I did a spotlight on Ludmila, who died before the year 1000, a great saint, and I think Mila’s a great way to honor her and not use the full name.

Re: Emmelia: I’ve never seen this name! It is beautiful! Emmelia Rose is lovely! Arielle’s right though—it will get heard as Amelia and seen as Emily. Maybe it would be best as a middle name? Brigid Emmelia and Tamsin Emmelia both strike me as lovely combos.

Brigid, Theodora, Anysia, Seraphina, Tamsin, Zoë, Naomi, and Matea are all gorgeous! I do think though that Seraphina is too close to Sophia in sound—do the rest of you agree? I love Seraphina though—maybe as a middle? With a short first name? Like Zoë Seraphina maybe? I’d never seen Anysia before—pretty name! Tamsin is one I myself considered, after a relative named Thomas– it’s so pretty and unexpected! Matea I looooove!! Brigid is beautiful, but strikes me as so different from their other kids’ names … Theodora and Naomi would fit in nicely I think.

I also love all those on their girl list that they love but won’t/can’t use, and I’m glad Arielle included them—they gave me a fuller idea of their taste, and I used them in trying to determine new ideas for them.

Thomas Ambrose is an amazing combo. Really really handsome, and would fit in really well with the other kids.

Matthias, Sebastian, Basil, Cyprian, Gabriel, Silas, Felix, Elias: These all really feel like Arielle’s kids’ names and her faith tradition to me. Love them all.

Brendan, Evan, Ciaran: These are like Brigid to me—I love them (you all know how I love the Irish/Celtic names!), but they seem sort of out of place as first names for this family to me. They’d make cool middle names though! (And really, who cares what I think … if they named a boy Ciaran, then all of a sudden it *would* fit in with their family, of course.)

Martin seems to me to be a really great bridge name—it’s not quite Matthias/Basil/Cyprian, but it seems closer to their style than Brendan/Evan/Ciaran. Martin’s great!

Okay! So what I did was I looked up the names they’ve used (firsts and middles) and those they like (even if they can’t/won’t use them) in my trusty Baby Name Wizard, as it lists, for each name, boy and girl names that are similar in terms of style/feel/popularity. My goal was to compile a list of names that I thought Arielle and her hubs would like. Then I whittled that list down to names that are pre-1054 saints. So hopefully all these ideas are acceptable faith-wise, even if they don’t really do it for them taste-wise (though I think they’ll at least think, “Ok, these are definitely heading in the right direction”):

Girls
(1) Natalia
I get all swoony over Natalia, I love love love it. Just gorgeous! There are two Sts. Natalia, the one I’m familiar with (died 4th century, wife of St. Adrian), and one that died in the 9th century—she was half-Moorish and a convert to Christianity, she’d be a powerful intercessor for today’s troubles.

(2) Felicity
I hesitated to include Felicity, because she’s so obvious to me that Arielle must have considered the name and purposely decided against it, especially since they have Felix on their boy list, but I just had to list it just in case. Such a beautiful name and a beautiful saint!

(3) Lilia or Liliya
This may be flirting with the rules, or breaking them altogether, because there’s no St. Lily as far as I can tell—my inspiration was Our Lady, and lilies are associated with her, but is that too distant a connection? I love the variant Lilia, it’s so beautiful, and then I saw the Russian/Ukrainian spelling Liliya, and I love that too.

(4) Aurelia
Aurelia is so pretty and feminine, and St. Aurelia Petronilla was cured by St. Peter himself, so that’s pretty cool!

(5) Philippa
Philippa could either be a nod to any of the Sts. Philip, or it could be for St. Philippa who was crucified around the year 220. It also has the awesome nickname Pippa! Philippa/Pippa is a nice nod to Arielle’s English heritage.

(6) Adelaide
The German form is Adelheid, but I was thinking that even with Arielle’s love of German names the part of her that doesn’t want a name that’s too harsh for English ears would prefer Adelaide. It’s so pretty!

(7) Phoebe
What about Phoebe? It’s pretty and quirky and biblical, I kind of like it for this family!

Boys
(1) Clement
My two favorites inspirations for Clement for this family are Pope St. Clement I, who was the fourth pope, and St. Clement of Ireland, who had strong ties to France (I believe he died in Paris in the 9th century).

(2) Leo
Pope St. Leo the Great!! I love the name Leo, a great name for a little boy..

(3) Linus
Of course, Pope St. Linus, the immediate successor to St. Peter. A really cool name!

(4) Casper/Caspar/Gaspar
This is a nod to Arielle’s love of German/Scandi names, and also one of the Three Wise Men! These are all legit variants of the same name (as is Jasper, but they don’t want another J name), and they’re each so cool in their own way.

(5) Tobias
Another German/Scandi name, and biblical, and a 4th century martyr. Such a cool name, I love it.

(6) Samuel
I love all the names I’ve listed up until now, but since their other boy is James, I could understand if Arielle and her hubs think they’re a bit too exotic for first names. But what about Samuel? There’s the biblical patriarch, with his awesome story, and there’s a 4th century martyr. I love the name Samuel, but what really makes it, in my opinion, is the nickname Sam. So. Great.

(7) Edmund
Finally, Edmund. Like Samuel, I love Edmund as a brother to James, and it’s an E name, which Arielle said she’s drawn to! St. Edmund of East Anglia (aka St. Edmund the Martyr) was born in Germany but beheaded in England in the 9th century, so it’s kind of a cool way to bring in both her German and English sensibilities.

And those are all my ideas for Arielle and her husband! What do you all think? Is anything here helpful or inspiring? I kept checking and rechecking Arielle’s email as I was working on it to be sure I hadn’t missed a rule, but there’s a good chance I did, inadvertently, so I apologize in advance if some of these aren’t quite right!

71 thoughts on “Baby name consultation: Biblical and/or first-millennium Saint’s name needed

  1. It’s a shame that she said no more “J” names, as John the Apostle is the younger brother of James, so that would be very fitting! Perhaps, though, they could use a different form of John, as she alluded to being a possibility — Evan, Ivan, or Ian, perhaps.

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  2. First of all, I love the name Miriam, I’m happy to see it used 🙂
    For another girl, my idea is Anastasia and for a boy, Nicholas (but Gabriel is great, too).

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Aren’t Emmelia and Emilia variations on the same saint (mother of Gregory and Basil, etc.)? Emilia was JPII’s mother’s name. I love it. Maybe I will have a granddaughter with the name some day, since it is one of my daughter’s favorites.

    So I really love both of Arielle’s favorites for girls – Lydia and Emmelia. I think she should stick with those. Both so pretty and significant. Even though not much is known about Lydia as a person, her role is so significant. So if you love the lyrical sound I say go for it.

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    • Yes, mother of Gregory, Basil, and my favorite kid of hers is St. Macrina 🙂 I had no idea it was JPII’s mother’s name! I see it spelled both ways pretty evenly. In Greek the emphasis would be Em-MEL-ia, but I usually hear EmmeLEEah.

      I am having a hard time breaking out of Lydia and Emmelia! So much so I’m kind of just wishing for twin girls 🙂 At my age I don’t know if I’ll get either of them, and both is stretching it!

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      • Oooh twin girls! Lydia and Emmelia!! *heart eyes*

        I had a friend growing up named Amelia who said it uh-MEL-lee-ah, and I’ve never heard that pronunciation since until your comment!

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  4. Being Byzantine, I love this post! My sons have a western saint first name +
    Eastern saint/family name. My mother is Emilia, which is probably because even though she was raised Protestant, her grandparents were Orthodox. She has a sister named Lidia (Spanish spelling.) What about Vera for a girl? It’s “faith” in Russian, but “truth” in Latin (variant of the word.) It’s a good way to tie in both faiths.

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  5. Kate, I liked your Lydia middle name suggestions. I also was thinking that names that end in the “l” or “n” sound go well with it, which yours were.
    Lydia Isabel
    Lydia Gabrielle
    Lydia Adele
    Lydia Jane
    Lydia Jeanne
    Lydia Christine
    Lydia Josephine

    I also like Helene, Ellen, Elaine, Elise, Catherine, Anne as possibles but those all are too close to the other girl’s names.

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    • I love all those combos! I actually have a friend with a Lydia Josephine. She was born at the same time as my Elisabeth, or Elisabeth might have been Lydia 🙂 In fact, even in the hospital, I looked at Elisabeth a few times and said to my husband, “Are you SURE she’s not supposed to be Lydia?” I love Elisabeth/Elsa’s name, but she had dark hair and eyes and looked more like Lydia than Elsa to me. Luckily, I got used to it 🙂

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      • Interesting! Especially re: our discussion a while back about when you all name your babies — beforehand? Not til you see them? I like that you got used to it!

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  6. At first I thought, with the preference for Scandinavian names, of Birgitta, but that’s probably too Scandi to go with the sibset, maybe Bridget? That’s definitely Celtic Irish/British.

    Then I thought of Agnes, and also Barbara. Underused perhaps, but I think they would fit, especially since they’ve already got a Miriam. I personally really like Irene, but I suspect they will have already considered that one. If only Annelise was usable, I feel like I’m always going on about how much I love that name, but already using Elisabeth and Anna definitely rules it out. I’m trying to think of other German combo names, I tend to really like them, but I’m drawing a blank right now!

    I really like Kate’s suggestions of Casper, Tobias and Samuel for boys. 🙂 The only boys name I’ve come up with at the moment is Daniel.

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      • I think I’ve seen Barbara more recently because it’s popular in Poland and there’s a big Polish population here. It seems to be having a revival in Spain too. It would be a bold choice though in an English speaking context, as the only Barbara actually know is in her early fifties and I think most women with the name are a generation up from that.

        Saying that though, there’s a Barbara in the ‘Stranger Things’ tv show who is being touted as a fan favourite character so maybe it’ll have a little comeback!

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      • So interesting!! My husband’s been bugging me to watch Stranger Things and I’ve been putting him off because I’m a scaredy cat — if I tell him we were discussing it on the blog he’ll be over the moon! I’m intrigued that Barbara’s a character’s name!

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    • I second the suggestion of Birgitta. Although she misses the cut off date for orthodoxy purposes, I think she hits many of the other qualifiers. Additionally, in 1999 she was made one of the patron saints of Europe which I think this family would associate with in.

      Also, one could shorten Birgitta to Brita and I think Elsa and Brita sound cute as sisters!

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    • I DO like Birgitta, and we love St. Brigid a lot here (I named our house Cill Dara after her church). Brigid/Bridget is a possibility.

      In our church, Irene is usually Ireni, which I have often thought would be cute as a middle name, and goes with Elisabeth Eleni too. Would also well with Sophia Catherine’s virtue name.

      I really do wish I could use Annelise!

      I think I forgot to tell Kate that James was almost Samuel (we were choosing between James, Samuel, and Elias). Still on the list!

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  7. Oh Brita is cute! Although St Birgitta of Sweden misses the cut off, St. Brigid is shared so she could be the saint name for a little Birgitta, since Brigitta is the Scandinavian form of Brigid/Bridget.

    I see now that she’s already considering Brigid, so this might be redundant.

    Liked by 2 people

    • I hadn’t thought of Brita, actually! That is really cute! And could definitely be for St. Brigid of Ireland. I don’t know anything about St. Birgitta of Sweden, but I like knowing Western saints that share my kids’ names. Actually, my husband mostly wants to name a son Thomas because he loves St. Thomas Aquinas (most Orthodox are not big fans of his, but my husband disagrees!) So he’d be baptized after St. Thomas the Apostle, but sneakily also named for St. Thomas Aquinas 🙂

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  8. Arielle (this mama) is a friend of mine and we share a lot of naming overlap. (We have both used James, Catherine, and Elisabeth, plus her middle name is the same as my first name. Also, my second child was supposed to be named Miriam Fiona had he been a girl.) Interestingly as well, the faith of my birth is the faith of Arielle’s adulthood!

    So, that said, I don’t think she should go with Thomas is she doesn’t love it because I have too many friends who have given in on names that they were only so-so about, and always felt some regret.

    My boy idea for them is Peter, for lots of reasons. I think it goes so well with their family’s names, including parents. I love Peter as a sibling name for James (it was sadly vetoed by my husband bc we have surname troubles), but it is probably my other favorite boys’ name (after James). Also, it is a great Scandi-German-British Isles choice, as is, or in another form (such as Pier or Piers).

    For girls, I’m a bit stumped, but I tend to agree that Emmelia will be pronounced as Amelia.

    Is St. Margaret honored in the Orthodox Church? Margaret to me seems a good match with Miriam, Sophia, and Elisabeth. I wish I could spend more time brainstorming but things quickly went south at my house just now!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Wait…you were born Orthodox? Really? How did I not know that?

      I do like Peter and think it goes very well with our crew.

      St. Margaret is SO close to the cutoff that there is some disagreement about her. I don’t think she has a day on our calendar, but there are many people who revere her. And Paul’s very conservative priest from before we were married named one of his (ten!) children Garrett after St. Margaret and has a great devotion to her. It does go with our German last name well!

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      • Yes, I was born Orthodox and we became Catholic when I was 7. It was a winding road for my parents…my mother was raised Episcopalian, my father, Mormon. They became Orthodox after they were married, but in all I think they were in the OrthodoxChurch only about 10 years.

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  9. oh i like this sibset! miriam is my favorite name since I was a kid. also I have an auntie named lidia and a cousin named vera! I think they should with Lydia, and agree that Lydia Madeline goes very well with Sophia Catherine, maybe too well? But really, it’s a winner! I also think Matilda is very cool, as is Louisa (miri, sophie, elsa and lulu/lou? pretty cute).

    For a boy I love James and Linus, but Matthias could honour your friend who passed away?

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  10. First I love the idea of Evangeline for the Annunciation!

    My suggestion for a boy is Andrew or the Scandinavian Anders. Once we had our James I knew his little brother had to be Andrew! It works nicely with the sisters’ names as well.

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  11. We have an Emmelia Rose! And most people do pronounce it Amelia. It bothered me at first, so I often corrected people. Now I don’t really mind or regret it at all. St. Emmelia is such a great patron for my daughter and I! And her great grandmother’s name was Amelia, so that was our inspiration. Her nickname was ‘Mealy’, so we like to use that. I was very excited when I saw you considering using it!

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  12. I don’t know if anyone will ever see this comment, but I was looking back at this post and saw I never updated! We did indeed have another girl in 2019, and named her Lydia Zoë. I love her name and can’t imagine her as anything else, although I do hold out hope for Emmelia Rose someday! For now, I’ve come back to make my boy name list for #6 🙂

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