Obscure (At the time) 1880's names

  1. Landon
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "long hill"
    • Description:

      Landon is a popular surname name; it's been dropping slightly in recent years but has surpassed its once more popular rhyming cousin Brandon. For some it may bring back nostalgic memories of Little House on the Prairie 's understanding Pa, played by Michael Landon.
  2. Laurie
    • Origin:

      English, diminutive of Laura
    • Meaning:

      "from Laurentum or bay laurel"
    • Description:

      Laurie morphed into the more streamlined Lori in the sixties but now feels dated for a girl in either spelling. Update Lauren has been renovated as Laurel or Laura itself.
  3. Lavada
    • Leana
      • Leda
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "happy"
        • Description:

          Leda is that rare name that has not yet been discovered in the current craze for ancient names from mythology. In classical Greek myth, Leda was a great beauty who mothered another great beauty, Helen of Troy. Leda is at once simple, deeply-rooted, and unique: Only 23 baby girls were named Leda in the US last year. A name used in several European countries, pronunciation is usually the straightforward lee-dah but the Italians say lay-dah.
      • 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.
      • Leopold
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "brave people"
        • Description:

          This aristocratic, somewhat formal Germanic route to the popular Leo is a royal name: Queen Victoria used it to honor a favorite uncle, King Leopold of Belgium. Though Leopold sounds as if it might be a leonine name, it's not really a relative of such choices as Leon, and Leonard.
      • Levy
        • Lionel
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "young lion"
          • Description:

            Lionel is one leonine name that hasn't taken off as cousins Leo and Leonardo have, though it did reenter the Top 1000 in 2010 after several years away; it was at its highest point in the 1920s and 1930s.
        • Llewellyn
          • Origin:

            Welsh, variation of Llywelyn
          • Meaning:

            "leader's image"
          • Description:

            Llewellyn/Llywelyn is a common patriotic first name in Wales, with its distinctive Welsh double LL's; in the U.S. Llewellyn would make a daring choice, though with the chance that some might find the ellen sound slightly feminine.
        • Louetta
          • Origin:

            American invented name
          • Description:

            Antique girl names like Louise, Louisa, Loretta, and Etta are all on the rise, and Louetta is a hidden gem among them. Rumer Willis recently revived this vintage compound name for her daughter, Louetta Isley Thomas Willis. Louetta, a combination of Lou and Etta, was used consistently from the 1910s-1960s' but has never been given to more than 50 baby girls in a single year.
        • Lulie
          • Origin:

            Short form of Lula or Louise, German and French
          • Meaning:

            "renowned warrior"
          • Description:

            One of the few Lu- names that you've probably never heard of, Lulie could prove a good alternative for Luna, Lucy, and Lula.
        • Macie
          • Origin:

            Spelling variation of Macy
          • Meaning:

            "hill"
          • Description:

            Macie is one variation that has become more popular than the original Macy, perhaps thanks to its resemblance to the stylish Maisie. While Macie is usually pronounced to rhyme with lacy while Maisie sounds more like crazy, there is undoubtedly some overlap -- and confusion.
        • Mahlon
          • Origin:

            Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "sickly"
          • Description:

            Obscure Old Testament name -- he was the son of Naomi and the husband of Ruth -- that's become even more obscure over the past century, perhaps due to its unappealing meaning.
        • Maida
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "maiden"
          • Description:

            Old English name as outmoded as the use of the word maid for a young girl.
        • Marcellus
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "young warrior"
          • Description:

            This ancient Roman family name, first borne by the distinguished Marcus Claudius Marcellus and later by two popes, is a possibilty in the hot new category of names from antiquity.
        • Margaretha
          • Maybelle
            • Origin:

              Variation of Mabel; combination of May and Belle; "loveable"
            • Meaning:

              "loveable"
            • Description:

              This spelling variation of Mabel clears up the pronunciation — "may-belle", as opposed to "may-bull". Maybelle is packed with Southern charm, and like sister name Mabel is on the rise, but still on a much smaller scale.
          • Mercedes
            • Origin:

              Spanish
            • Meaning:

              "gracious gifts, benefits"
            • Description:

              Mercedes is one of the few names attached to luxury living that we can wholeheartedly recommend, it being a legitimate Spanish appellation stemming from one of the epithets given to the Virgin Mary--Santa Maria de las Mercedes, or Our Lady of the Mercies. The car, by the way was named after the eleven-year-old daughter of the Daimler company's French distributor in 1901.
          • Milo
            • Origin:

              Latin and Old German
            • Meaning:

              "soldier or merciful"
            • Description:

              Milo is most commonly considered to be Germanic name derived from the Latin word miles, meaning "soldier." However, there is evidence to suggest it also may have independently spawned from the Slavic root milu, meaning "merciful." Milo predates brother name Miles, a variation that evolved when the name immigrated to the British Isles in the Middle Ages. Mylo is an alternate spelling.