Helena: Baby Name of the DayHelena sounds romantic and classic, and best of all? It’s relatively underused.

Thanks to Another for suggesting our Baby Name of the Day.

Helena: Helen’s Cousin

A century ago, it was just Helen – hold the ‘a’ – that dominated American baby naming. It came second only to Mary from the turn of the twentieth century right through the 1910s.

Ellen, Elena, Lena, Elaine, Ilona, and Nell all appear on the same family tree. A crooked line stretches over to Eileen and even tangles up with Eleanor. Many of those names have routinely outranked Helena. In the 1950s, Helen, Ellen, and Elaine all appeared in the US Top 100, as did Eileen. Today, it’s Elena most in favor.

Helen comes from a Greek word meaning torch, or bright. It might have been influenced by moon goddess name Selene, too.

Helena: Ancient Roots

Way back in the fifth century BC, Euripides penned Helen, telling of the staggeringly beautiful daughter of Zeus and the mortal Leda. Her face would launch 1,000 ships – otherwise known as the Trojan War.

Whether the given name was common throughout the next few hundred years is difficult to say, but there is a Queen Helena of Adiabene in Mesopotmia around the year 30.

Another woman by the name gave birth to a rather famous son: Constantine, the Roman Emperor famed for ending the Diocletian persecutions and declaring religious toleration in the 300s. She’s considered a saint.

Helena: Saint

The saint inspired plenty of parents throughout the following centuries.

Geoffrey of Monmouth popularized Arthurian legend back in the twelfth century. He claimed her for England, making her a princess from Colchester. This is almost certainly pure fancy, but it led to many girls called Ellen – the popular Anglicization of the name in medieval England.

English parents embraced Helen sometime after the Renaissance. Elsewhere in Europe, the Latinate form became common. Throughout Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, and German-speaking countries, Helena is preferred. It’s a steady Top 100 choice in many countries.

Helena: So Very English

It’s also the form chosen by Shakespeare twice. He gives the name to one of the young lovers in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Helena is the clever would-be-bride at the center of All’s Well That Ends Well, too.

Queen Victoria named her fifth child Helena Augusta Victoria. There have been royals named Elena and Helen, too. And in Victorian England, Helen was the most common form. Perhaps Prince Albert’s German roots influenced the name’s style; her nickname was the very Germanic Lenchen.

Either way, the literary and regal roots make this form of the name feel especially English.

Americans also probably think of London-born actor Helena Bonham Carter. She’s the daughter of an Elena and granddaughter to a Helene. She named her daughter Nell.

And one more: E! original series The Royals gave this name to their fictional dowager queen, played by Elizabeth Hurley.

Helena: By the Numbers

Despite lagging behind other forms of the name, Helena has appeared in the US Top 1000 every year except one. That’s enough to qualify as a classic.

And yet, it often appears near the fringes, falling into the high 800s and 900s in the 1980s and 1900s.

Credit for the name’s reversal seems to go to Ms. Bonham Carter. As she transitioned from rising indie star to full-on celebrity, her given name rose in use.

And yet, it still remains outside of the current Top 500. That could represent an opportunity, but it also raises the question: in our age of Isabella and Sophia, why is this name so overlooked?

Helena: The Million Dollar Question …

My guess? Pronunciation problems give parents pause.

There’s HEL en ah, he LEN ah, he LEE nah and he LAY nah. And I’m not sure that captures them all!

Your preferred nickname might inform the pronunciation you like best. Laney, Nell, and Lena all suggest a different sound.

Or maybe it depends on your roots. You might hear this name across much of Europe, but it sounds different in Oslo than in Warsaw, and it’s not said the same in Brussels and Berlin. The capital of Montana takes a specific pronunciation; but it’s not necessarily the same as the dozen or more other places with the same name.

Helena: Traditional With an Edge

Maybe it’s because this name remains rare. Credit could go to the actor. Or maybe it’s other factors, like the 1993 twisted horror story Boxing Helena, the gory love-gone-wrong song by The Misfits, or the Goth-pop hit by My Chemical Romance. But somehow traditional and storied Helena feels like a name with a little bit of an edge.

If you can settle on one sound – and don’t mind correcting others – it might be the perfect stands-out, fits-in choice.

So tell me: how do you say Helena? And would worries about pronunciation stop you from using this name?

Originally posted on August 11, 2008, this post was revised substantially and republished on September 26, 2018.

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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25 Comments

  1. I love all of the pronuciations, especially HEL-en-uh or Hel-EN-uh. The nickname Lenny/Lennie is also great.

  2. I’m heh-LAY-nuh. I just had a stranger tell me on the phone how beautiful my name was after she pronounced it correctly! My name is often mispronounced and misspelled (Helen, Alena, Alana, etc.), but I love it. Thanks, Mom!

  3. This being my name, the multiple pronunciations can be a real pain! I pronounce it he – LEE – nah but annoyingly I always get HEL – en – nah from people who don’t know me. Then again, I know a girl wih the same name as me who has the opposite problem. Other Helenas in my family have resorted to calling themselves the less ambiguous ‘Lena’ after getting tired of correcting people!

  4. Helena is definitely on my wildcard list — I pronounce it as Heh-LAY-nah, but HEL-en-ah is nice as well. Helena Bonham Carter is one of my favorite actresses — Especially in Harry Potter! I don’t think anyone else would be able to pull off Bellatrix as well as she does. She’s just amazingly good — An actress you want to love and hate at the same time. And for 43 years old, she looks, at oldest, 38! I have major respect for the woman, even if the names she chose are better as nicknames. (Billy Ray, which only horribly reminds me of Cyrus, would have been lovely as William Raymond, and Nell would have been nice as any longer form: Elena and Eleanor being my favorites, if she didn’t want a little Helena after her.)

  5. Wow – a name that is almost universally liked, but without reaching any consensus on pronunciation! Probably why it wouldn’t make my short list – though I’d be charmed to meet a Helena, regardless of how she said her name. 🙂

    Emmy Jo and Kayt, I think your experience is very, very common. My husband’s tastes are all over the map – he likes Emily for a girl, but was also willing to consider Octavia, Aurelia and Clio. For a boy, though, he was set – we HAD to use his dad’s name, Alexander. No discussion. He was willing to *call* him Alexei, but it doesn’t change the fact that he’s still one in a horde of Alex-names.

    I console myself with the statistics: In 1907, almost 40% of boys had one of the Top 20 most popular names while just under 29% of girls shared a Top 20 pick. By 1957, those numbers were 43% for boys and 30% for girls. And even in 2007, 16.5% of boys get a Top 20 choice, while just 13% of girls do.

    While women’s opportunities may have been more constrained over the years, in terms of naming, it seems like we’ve always been able to imagine a wider range of possible personalities and qualities attached to our daughters. Or maybe there’s some other explanation, but it is a curious – and enduring – fact that the range of acceptable name for girls always seems to be broader.

  6. Emmy, I know the pain. My husband took my top fifty boy’s name list and narrowed it down to James and William. Good luck! I think you might have better luck with Miles than Julius, although I think I like Julius a bit more.

  7. My husband’s not a fan of daring boys’ names. I’m still trying to convince him that Julius and Miles are normal enough to use on a child when the time comes; I don’t think I’d have much luck with Demetrius.

  8. Emmy Jo, Demetrius is wonderful (Dmitriy is a HUGE favorite) and Lysander’s been a love of mine for a long time! You wouldn’t any weird comments from me! 😀