Female Historic Names

  1. Katherine
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "pure"
    • Description:

      Katherine is one of the oldest, most diverse, and all-around best names: it's powerful, feminine, royal, saintly, classic, popular, and adaptable. Long one of the top girls' names starting with K, Katherine has now been unseated on the popularity list by upstarts Kennedy and Kinsley, but a dip in popularity only adds to its charm.
  2. Kersten
    • L'aigle
      • Lavina
        • Origin:

          English variation of Lavinia, Latin
        • Description:

          This vintage name is still used today among the Amish.
      • Leota
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "of the people"
        • Description:

          Leota is an antique name rarely used any more -- it was given to just 8 baby girls in the US in 2021. Some sources says Leota is a Native American name meaning blue flower.
      • Letitia
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "joy, gladness"
        • Description:

          Letitia is a delicate, once prim and proper sounding name whose staid image has been unbuttoned by numerous phonetic spellings. The original, often used in Spanish-speaking families, would still make an attractive, delicate choice. After a solid century on the Top 1000 list, Letitia fell off in the early 1980s and has not yet returned.
      • Lorena
        • Origin:

          Spanish variation of Lorraine
        • Meaning:

          "from the province of Lorraine"
        • Description:

          A feminine name heard most often in the Hispanic community. Surprisingly, Lorena was on the US Top 1000 list of girls' names for an impressive 130 years, from 1880 until falling off in 2011. We do not predict an imminent return.
      • Louise
        • Origin:

          French and English, feminine variation of Louis
        • Meaning:

          "renowned warrior"
        • Description:

          Louise has for several decades now been seen as competent, studious, and efficient—desirable if not dramatic qualities. But now along with a raft of other L names, as well as cousin Eloise, Louise is up for reappreciation—sleek and chic, stylish in Paris, and starting to become so in the US as well. Louisa is perhaps more in tune with the times, but Louise has more edge. Louise has been on the rise lately, and reentered the US Top 1000 for the first time in a quarter century in 2016.
      • Lucy
        • Origin:

          English variation of Lucia, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "light"
        • Description:

          A versatile classic, Lucy is both sweet and solid, a saint's name, and the heroine of several great novels. First fashionable in England and Wales, Lucy is now a popular choice in the US, The Netherlands, and New Zealand.
      • Luisa
        • Origin:

          Italian, Spanish
        • Meaning:

          "renowned warrior"
        • Description:

          This streamlined Italian and Spanish spelling of Louisa is currently very popular in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Portugal, where it's usually spelt Luísa.
      • Lydia
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "woman from Lydia"
        • Description:

          Lydia is one of the first place names, after an area of Asia Minor whose inhabitants are credited with strong musical talent great wealth. Always among the US Top 1000 girl names, Lydia is a quietly fashionable classic.
      • Lesceline
        • Leutwinus
          • Lewis
            • Luitgarde
              • Magdalene
                • Origin:

                  Spelling variation of Magdalen
                • Meaning:

                  "woman from Magdala or high tower"
                • Description:

                  This name made famous in the New Testament has gone from crusty grandma to sleek and chic in recent years, or is it months? The name's image is perhaps helped by the fact that Mary Magdalene was one of the most intriguing women inthe Bible, both a saint and a sinner.
              • Marcie
                • Maret
                  • Margaret
                    • Origin:

                      Greek
                    • Meaning:

                      "pearl"
                    • Description:

                      Margaret is derived from the French Marguerite, which in turn came from Margarita, the Latin form of the Greek Margarites. Margarites was based on the Old Persian word margārīta, meaning "pearl."
                  • Margery
                    • Origin:

                      Medieval variation of Margaret
                    • Meaning:

                      "pearl"
                    • Description:

                      An old royal name in England and Scotland that's also spelled Marjorie. Popular in the Middle Ages and Tudor period, it was revived at the end of the 19th century, peaked in 1921 and dropped off the list in 1958, enough time to be reconsidered as a Margaret alternative. The name Margery Daw is familiar via the seesaw nursery rhyme and Margery Williams wrote the children's classic The Velveteen Rabbit..