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N by Aunt Owwee via Flickr

Lester is a non-starter, but Chester is catching on once more. And Oscar and Hector have some serious style. Where does that leave this choice?

Thanks to Hayley for suggesting the mythological Nestor as our Baby Name of the Day.

Nestor appears in plenty of stories, and he’s a steady presence – intelligent, strategic, seemingly free of the character flaws that plague so many of our heroes. Of course, Nestor also rarely takes center stage.

He became King of Pylos after his dad had a falling out with Heracles. (Heracles killed Nestor’s dad, Neleus, plus Nestor’s brothers.)

Maybe it was his father’s untimely demise; maybe Nestor was just born sharp. Either way, when he appears in ancient myth, he’s usually there to dispense wisdom. His adventures included:

  • Setting out as one of the Argonauts;
  • Fighting in the Trojan War as one of Homer’s long-haired Achaeans;
  • Attempting to make peace between Agamemnon and Achilles;
  • Coaching a younger warrior on the finer points of chariot racing.

A second legend comes to mind, this one rooted in the twentieth century. In early 1900s, brothers David and William Horsley opened one of the first movie studios. Nestor Motion Picture Company relocated from New Jersey to Los Angeles in 1911, and built an early motion picture stage in Sunset Boulevard’s Blondeau Tavern. The Mutt and Jeff comedy shorts – live action adaptations of a popular comic strip – were Nestor’s breakout hit. The studio was acquired, and then acquired again.

If that pair of references doesn’t move you, there’s also:

  • A third century saint;
  • A type of parrot native to New Zealand;
  • A long-eared donkey, immortalized by the same studio that created the stop-motion animated Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer in the 1970s. Their Nestor is the donkey a pregnant Mary rode to Jerusalem;
  • A fictional penguin from 2006’s animated Happy Feet;
  • French crime novelist Leo Malet’s hard-boiled PI Nestor Burma.

He’s also a surname, sometimes related to the hero from antiquity, and sometimes adopted as a convenient Anglicization of an Irish surname.

Nestor appeared in the US Top 1000 most years from the 1960s into the early 2000s, and a few times earlier, too. most years 1960s into early 2000s. I can’t confirm it, but I suspect many of the Nestors were Latino. The name has at least some currency in South America, where Nestor Kirchner was President of Argentina from 2003 through 2007.

With names from Connor to Archer popular of late, it isn’t a stretch to think that Nestor could wear well on a son. He’s unexpected, but not at all out of step.

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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What do you think?

18 Comments

  1. A friend of mine is married to a Nestor, who sometimes goes by Nick. His family’s Greek, and he’s one of many Nestors in the family tree (it cycles through regularly).

  2. Sorry, this name feels so clunky and bulky. I love clunky names but this is not one of them. I think all ‘ester’ names remind me of Uncle Fester.

  3. Nestor Rodriguez was my buddy Harold’s big brother. He died a few years ago and I still miss him. Other than that, I’m a child of the 70’s and Nestor is all long – eared donkey. A sweet story. Nestor’s usable, but not by me.

  4. Despite the fact that it is a legitimate name I fear it will always sound rather made up to me!

  5. I like Nestor, but perhaps more for the fact that it’s a useable and rare N name than anything else. I prefer Castor and Astor 🙂

  6. My primary point of reference for this name is Nestor the butler from the Tintin comic series. It’s not a bad reference, but it’s not exactly enthralling either.

    I’m at the stage in pregnancy where a major topic of conversation on my birth board is nesting, so the word “nester” also comes to mind.

  7. Nestor = kea. Some call them the bogans of the NZ avian word. They love to attack parked cars and engage in other anti-social behaviour https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMLpPoOeays&feature=fvwrel

    My only other association is from that cult horror/comedy Tremors. Nestor was the annoying dude that finally got eaten in the end. Naturally I cheered.

    I think it sounds extremely unfortunate.

  8. Don’t forget actor Nestor Carbonell, who played Richard Alpert on “LOST”, Luis on “Suddenly Susan”, and Mayor Garcia in the film “The Dark Knight”.

    1. Count me in too that Richard Albert in Lost is all I think about when I hear Nestor. But I had no idea where the name came from so it’s nice to know it’s mythological