baby name ZoraZora recently returned to the US Top 1000, after over sixty years away.

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

Dawn

This name comes from a Slavic word meaning dawn. It’s used in the Balkans, as well as Bulgaria and the Czech Republic.

American parents embraced Dawn in the 1960s, for its hopeful, sunny vibe. Gilligan’s Island made Dawn Wells a star as Mary Ann Summers in the same decade. And Frank Valli and the Four Seasons released their upbeat, mournful plea Dawn in 1964. (Listen here. Dawn, go away, I’m no good for you …)

We still love names related to the night sky, like Luna and Stella. This one fits right in. It’s also another Emma name: two-syllables, ends-with-a, and feels complete without being too elaborate.

Plenty of variations can be found, too: Zorana and Zorina, Zarja and Zorica. But it’s the simplest form that seems most likely to appeal to parents in the US, and that’s thanks to another set of names.

Nora and Friends

Nora, Cora, and Aurora appear in the current US Top 100. Other spellings and more -ora names, like Norah and Kora, Amora and Elora, rank in the Top 1000.

It’s a sound that appeals to parents, and feels very current for a daughter today.

Factor in our appreciation of the letter Z, and it’s easy to see Zora as the same … but just different enough.

Renaissance Woman

It’s also a name with impeccable literary roots, thanks to Zora Neale Hurston.

The Harlem Renaissance was underway when Zora Neale Hurston arrived in New York City in 1925. She was soon at the center of the movement, publishing the literary magazine Fire!! with Langston Hughes and several other writers we still read today.

In 1937, she penned Their Eyes Were Watching God, still considered one of the most important novels of the 20th century.

Beyond her literary achievements, Hurston studied anthropology at Barnard, collected and published African-American folk tales, and traveled to Haiti and Jamaica to study their traditions.

She was largely forgotten, only to be rediscovered in the 1970s, thanks to writer Alice Walker and others interested in the Harlem Renaissance.

By the Numbers

Maybe this name sounds modern, but it’s actually exactly right for Ms. Hurston. She was born in 1891, and Zora ranked in the US Top 1000 most years from 1880 through 1939.

Then it faded, and dwindled to almost nothing. Around a dozen girls received the name most years from the 1960s into the 1980s. Only in the 1990s did Zora slowly start to climb in use once more.

It wasn’t specific to Zora, of course. None of the -ora names fared well in those years.

But today they’re back. With an appealing meaning drawn from the natural world, a literary pedigree tied to the Harlem Renaissance, and that great first initial, Zora feels like a successor to Ava and Zoe, Aurora and Zara. If you’re after something simple, feminine, and just slightly different, but with lots of backstory, this could be the name for you.

First published on October 13, 2009, this post was revised substantially and re-published on July 10, 2019.

baby name Zora

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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21 Comments

    1. I forgot to say also that Zora in Spanish has a different pronunciation from “Zorra”, so there’s not as much to worry about.

  1. Hello, my first name is Zora.

    It is amazing, so far I have met or heard of so few of them, only 3 actually. I love the name, it was always unusual at school and so I didn’t always love it completely, but being a grown up , now in my mid 30’s with the name is great, i feel unique and special and anyone whoever comments on my name say ‘ what a beautiful name’ …. yay, thanks mum!!!

  2. we absolutely planned to name our girl zora(h), after zora neale and also it’s meaning of dawn…but our girl turned out to be a boy(: so we named him Ares instead (the greek god)…which worked out well…but love love love zora! it’s beautiful, exotic but still easy to pronounce and spell. fits with many first names, too.

  3. Just word of warning… I just mentioned this name to my husband and he informed me that the Spanish translation of Zorra is “whore”. Eek! I know the spelling is different, but that translation is bad enough to steer me clear of this name.

    1. Thanks for the warning! My own name is problematic enough (Charlotte the Scarlet Harlot), I wouldn’t want to inflict anything potentially, erm, sketchy, on my kids.

  4. I had never really considered this name before, but I think it’s gorgeous. I loved Their Eyes Were Watching God, so that only adds to its appeal for me. (I used to want to name a baby Janie after the main character of that book.) 🙂

  5. I met a little Zora at a baby shower – named after the author! It wore really well on a toddler, and I can imagine it would wear well on an adult, too.

  6. This is the first time I’ve ever really come across Zora, a fact which stands as yet another testimony to the truth that I’m sorely lacking in literacy when it comes to the work of American authors — something which I’m slowly working to rectify. When I first saw the name I thought, “Oh, a smush of Zelda and Nora”. However, the name’s growing on me, and I’m even considering suggesting it to my husband as a possible future middle!

  7. Zora is so beautiful to me. She has a spunky and exotic sound, a cool meaning and I love the mythological associations. In Slavic mythology, it is believed that Zora was the goddess of dawn. Other sources believe that the zoras were a trinity of goddesses that had the same role as the fates. I also like the fact that is has an Eastern European connotation but is also easy to say and spell for English speakers.