Dark Academia Names

  1. Sibyl
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "seer, oracle"
    • Description:

      The original but less common spelling of the ancient mythological name, now used mostly for fictional witches. But the rise of the lovely Lady Sybil Crawley on television's Downton Abbey and the fall of the multiple personality Sybil, a self-confessed fake, may give Sibyl and Sybil more credibility as a name.
  2. Eponine
    • Origin:

      French literary name
    • Description:

      Eponine is attracting new notice via the movie of Les Miserables, based on the book by Victor Hugo. Eponine is the spoiled daughter of Cosette's foster parents whose name, according to the story, was lifted by her mother from a romance novel. As in a romance, Eponine redeems herself by becoming a martyr to love.
  3. Keats
    • Origin:

      English literary name
    • Meaning:

      "kite"
    • Description:

      Poetic and easier to pronounce (it's keets) than Yeats (which is yates). This one of many poets' names to consider, such as Auden, Eliot, Frost, Byron, Lorca, Marlowe, Blake, Emerson and Tennyson, which was used by Russell Crowe.
  4. Melisande
    • Origin:

      French form of Millicent, German
    • Meaning:

      "strong in work"
    • Description:

      This old-time fairy tale name is rarely heard in the modern English-speaking world, but it's so, well, mellifluous, that it would make a lovely choice for a twenty-first century girl--a romanticized tribute to an Aunt Melissa or Melanie.
  5. Vander
    • Dido
      • Origin:

        Greek, meaning obscure
      • Description:

        Dido was the heroine of Virgil's Aeneid and of the opera "Dido and Aeneas," and in Roman mythology the founder of Carthage. A strong ancient name in the Juno mode, but it could have some awkward associations down the line.
    • Morticia
      • Origin:

        Fictional invented name
      • Meaning:

        "mortician"
      • Description:

        Charles Addams invented the name Morticia for the mother in his cartoon series "The Addams Family." The name comes from the word mortician—very appropriate for this macabre mom.
    • Leontine
      • Origin:

        French female form of Leontios, Greek
      • Meaning:

        "lion"
      • Description:

        Leontine is the French form of a name that's more familiar by its spelling variation Leontyne, the name made famous by opera diva Price. An obscure choice, Leontine nevertheless feels right for our lion-name-crazed moment.
    • Claudius
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "lame; enclosure"
      • Description:

        Claudius is one of the most user-friendly of the ancient Roman names – even though it's associated with the villainous character in Shakespeare's Hamlet. But as with feminine form Claudia, the "lame" meaning may stymie the rise of Claudius. Some etymologists theorize that the name may relate to the word for enclosure or clause, an alternate meaning that may appeal to a child with a form of this otherwise-appealing name.
    • Penrose
      • Origin:

        Cornish and Welsh place name and surname
      • Meaning:

        "top of the heath"
      • Description:

        Penrose – an ancient locational surname derived from several villages in Cornwall, Wales, and the Welsh border country of England – might work as a first name, although the "Rose" syllable might lead the uninitiated to assume it's a female name. As a middle name, however, it would make for a surprising and distinguished choice. A male Penrose could be called Pen/Penn, Ross or Roe for short.
    • Bertram
      • Origin:

        German
      • Meaning:

        "bright raven"
      • Description:

        Old Norman name last current in the 1930s, and firmly in our 'so far out it will always be out' category – despite its appearance as a Hogwarts student in Harry Potter. This is the full first name of P.G. Wodehouse's inimitable Bertie Wooster.
    • Clotilde
      • Origin:

        Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese
      • Meaning:

        "famous in battle"
      • Description:

        A romantic rarity, derived from the Old German name Chlotichilda, meaning "famous in battle." Saint Clotilde was a Frankish queen, wife of Clovis I, who played a role in the spread of Christianity.
    • Amoret
      • Origin:

        Literary name
      • Description:

        This lovely name from Spenser's The Faerie Queene is borne by a character who represents married love. A related unusual-yet-usable choice: Amabel.
    • Torquil
      • Origin:

        Scottish from Norse
      • Meaning:

        "Thor's cauldron"
      • Description:

        Torquil, is a quirky but intriguing option that evolved from an ancient Scandinavian nameand was imported into Scotland by the Vikings. The Gaelic form of the name is Torcaill.
    • Eugenie
      • Origin:

        French form of Eugenia, Greek
      • Meaning:

        "wellborn, noble"
      • Description:

        Eugenie enjoyed a major dusting off when Fergie and Prince Andrew chose it for their daughter, restoring a patina of royal sheen it hadn't had since the time of Napoleon III's glamorous empress--who spent much of her life in England. It was also borne by Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, after whom Prince Andrew's younger daughter was named.
    • Roxana
      • Origin:

        Persian
      • Meaning:

        "dawn; or, little star"
      • Description:

        The name of the wife of Alexander the Great, more attractive than the better-known Roxanne. Roxana was first used in the English-speaking world in the 1600s and was popularized by Daniel Defoe's novel Roxana, published in 1724. An underused and attractive possibility and perfect if you're searching for names that mean new beginnings.
    • Lilivere
      • Origin:

        Invented name, combination of Lili and Guinevere
      • Meaning:

        "lily + white shadow, white wave"
      • Description:

        This romantic, ethereal name sounds straight out of Arthurian legend but is in fact a modern hybrid of Guinevere and Lili.
    • Beowulf
      • Origin:

        Old English
      • Meaning:

        "bee wolf"
      • Description:

        This ancient name is that of the hero of the epic Beowulf, which is thought to be the oldest-ever poem in English lit written in the vernacular. J. R. R. Tolkien used the poem as one of his inspirations for The Lord of the Rings.
    • Caradoc
      • Origin:

        Welsh
      • Meaning:

        "amiable, beloved"
      • Description:

        An ancient Celtic name worn by one of the Knights of the Round Table, as well as a semi-legendary Welsh King.
    • Wilde
      • Origin:

        English surname, variation of Wild, English word name
      • Meaning:

        "undomesticated, uncultivated"
      • Description:

        The final -e takes this from a daring word name to a literary honor name, for the inimitable Irish author, poet and playwright Oscar Wilde, infamous for his wit and flamboyance.