
The 10 'old lady' vintage baby names that are making a major comeback
Vintage baby names are making a comeback, with many parents opting for unique names that have fallen out of popularity - here are the top 10 'old lady' monikers
Some "old lady names" are making a comeback as people want look for unique names
(Image: JW LTD via Getty Images)
Many new parents are seeking out unique and uncommon names for their little ones. In order to do this, some parents are turning towards older names which had fallen out of favours, leading to a resurgence in these vintage 'old-lady' names.
QR Code Generator analysed data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) comparing the top 100 baby girl names from 1924 with the most recent ONS data to identify which nearly century-old names are currently the most and least popular.
The most popular vintage name for girls is Lily, with 2,290 baby girls named Lily in 2023, making it the top choice among vintage names.
While some hundred year old names have made a comeback, some have gone extinct
(Image: Cecile Lavabre via Getty Images)
Following the nature-inspired trend, Ivy was the second most popular, with 1,997 girls given this name in 2023. For our free daily briefing on the biggest issues facing the nation, sign up to the Wales Matters newsletter here
In third place, departing from the floral theme, was Florence, chosen by parents for 1,899 girls.
However, some vintage names have completely fallen out of favour. Phyllis, Pauline and Gertrude have become extinct in the UK, with no babies receiving these names.
Doreen, Muriel and Brenda are also rare, each being chosen for just three baby girls in 2023, reports the Express.
Top 10 most popular 100 year old baby girl names, and the number of baby girls born with name in 2023:
Lily: 2,290 Ivy: 1,997 Florence: 1,899 Evelyn: 1,673 Elsie: 1,662 Daisy: 1,585 Grace: 1,541 Emily: 1,280 Ada: 1,089 Ruby: 1,059
Top 10 rarest 100 year old baby girl names, and the number of baby girls born with name in 2023:
Phyllis, Pauline, Gertrude: 0 Doreen, Muriel, Brenda: 3 Sheila: 4 Beryl: 5 Marjorie, Thelma: 6 Maureen: 7 Gladys, Hilda, Marion: 8 Doris, Edna, Pamela, Mildred: 9 Gwendoline: 10
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Times
2 hours ago
- Times
My night at the extraordinary Tuscan home of a Renaissance artist
It is a roasting summer day in Florence. Down in the basin of the Arno, steam seems to rise from the baking streets and sweat pours from pores hitherto unknown. I sigh: what hell people put themselves through to see the Duomo. I, too, can see the Duomo, but I'm not down there. I'm up in the hills, wringing out my hair — not with sweat, but from a swim. I text a friend, Daniela, who lives in Florence. Come here after work! There's a breeze! It's a centuries-old routine for Florentines: when the heat hits, decamp to the hills. About 500 years ago the owner of this villa was probably sending a similar message to his city friend. His name was Ridolfo Ghirlandaio; his friend, Raphael. In the 15th and 16th centuries, the Ghirlandaio family — paterfamilias Domenico, his brothers David and Benedetto, and his son, Ridolfo, ran one of the foremost artist workshops in Florence. Domenico was a big beast of the Renaissance: Botticelli was his rival, Michelangelo his apprentice; Da Vinci, it's thought, studied Domenico's Last Supper before creating his own. The family — whose real name was Bigordi, but took Ghirlandaio from the crown-like women's garlands (ghirlande) that had made Domenico's father wealthy — became an artistic dynasty. Ridolfo was mates with Raphael, who invited him to Rome to work for the Pope. Ridolfo refused, wrote Giorgio Vasari, the Renaissance painter and art historian — he couldn't relinquish his view of the Duomo. I can see why. The Ghirlandaios' workshop was in Florence, but their hearts were at Colle Ramole, in the olive-strewn hills four and a half miles southeast, the city unfurling below around Brunelleschi's soaring terracotta dome. It became their haven — a villa and estate, with a furnace to smelt the tesserae for Domenico and David's mosaic of the Annunciation above the Duomo's side door. When Domenico died at 45, Ridolfo took over. He frescoed their family chapel: the Virgin and Child above the altar with two saints. Above them: two rainbow-winged putti. On either side, portraits of the family: Ridolfo and his son, his wife holding a baby, and his late dad, immortalised in ruddy middle-aged eternity. It's the only self-portrait by a Renaissance artist in their home, murmurs Marco Cecchi as we come face to face with Ridolfo, who stares us down — what are you doing in my house? Sure, Raphael is said to have painted the Virgin and Child on his teenage bedroom wall in Urbino; Sofonisba Anguissola's portrait of her father and siblings hung in her Cremona home, according to Vasari. But a selfie, in situ? This might be the only one. • Discover our full guide to Italy Cecchi, who grew up one hill away, is the guardian of this great patrimony. In 2010 his family bought the crumbling estate. They planned to turn it into flats, but decided that would ruin the history. 'I didn't [initially] realise how important this was,' he says of the house's heritage. 'I consider myself lucky to be the custodian, but see the real danger if it had gone to someone else.' So they pivoted, restoring the villa, converting the five outhouses into cottages, and renting it out as Dimora (home of) Ghirlandaio in 2018. At first they rented it for exclusive use only. Six houses, up to 40 people — the prices were stratospheric enough that Cecchi won't share them. Staff whisper of tech billionaires à deux, and American lawyers private-jetting their way over to play dolce vita for their birthdays. The cradle of the Renaissance had become a party pad for modern-day Gatsbys. Until now. This summer the estate has been broken up, so you can rent a single villa at Dimora Ghirlandaio for a single night. Instead of tens of thousands to get through the gate, you can now stump up £520 for the Limonaia suite overlooking the Renaissance-style lawn. Cecchi amiably admits it's to fill up slow periods — those filthy-rich Americans prefer June, July, September and October. But I — one of the first plebs through its doors — like to think of it as reclaiming the space for ordinary people. The idea is to keep some dates restricted for buyouts, open others for single bookings, and offer last-minute breaks where available. Right now there's availability throughout August and November, plus pockets in September and October. It'll be a steep learning curve, not least for the guests, unaccustomed to such luxury. I merrily went swimming in what I thought was a pool, only to be gently told it was a water feature. Of course it was — the real pool was unmistakable. A long, infinity edge melted into the estate's endless olive groves, fringed by lavender and jasmine (the grounds are an open-air perfumery). Two orange trees sprout from the centre — a nice way to split the kids' side from the adult depths, I thought, until Cecchi explained that they were there to recall Domenico's famous Cenacolo, or Last Supper fresco, in Florence's Ognissanti church. That's the joy of Dimora Ghirlandaio. Of course, it's gorgeous — but then, plenty of Tuscan villas are. Sure, it's extra-cushy — it's been designed to please billionaires, after all. But it's the history that makes this special. Cecchi has turned the estate into a homage to the family. Each of the five rooms in the main villa, where I stay — wondering if mine, overlooking the Duomo, was where Domenico once slept — is named after a brother; in another, they sport the names of pigments the family used. The walls are painted in soft mints, greys, peaches and pinky-reds — colours that Ridolfo used in the chapel. The floors are terracotta, fired at nearby Impruneta (just like the Duomo), while the fireplaces are in pietra serena, the stone that lines the Uffizi porticoes. Above the gate is the Bigordi coat of arms: three spheres, not unlike that of Domenico's friend Lorenzo de' Medici. My favourite (and the cheapest) cottage, the two-bedroom La Bottega, is supposedly the site of the family workshop. Today there's a desk overlooking the Duomo — just as inspiring 500 years on. The other villas have been crafted from stables and outbuildings. There are original fittings galore — chunky beams, a two-bull yoke — and all except La Limonaia have a strip of private garden. • 28 of the best villas in Tuscany The estate used to be self-sufficient — the Bigordis produced wine, oil and cereals — and it still is, in the sense that there's no need to leave the property. Daniela comes up for aperitivo, the sky turning a Ridolfo-esque pink behind the Duomo, church bells chiming in the distance. Dinner is in the greenhouse-like restaurant, or overlooking the olives. You can do painting classes, wine tastings, cooking classes. We taste the estate's olive oil with farm manager Clemente Pellegrini Strozzi — a descendant of another Renaissance dynasty, and a man so passionate about olive oil ('It's like making a painting') that he talks to his trees. The more I learn about the Ghirlandaio family, the more I covet their art. Dimora offers a Ghirlandaio tour of Florence — Domenico's frescoes in Santa Maria Novella, Ognissanti and Santa Trinita — but I want to see the family's works in the landscape in which they lived. Each villa has a book about the history of Colle Ramole, which also lists the locations of every nearby work. That was my Sunday settled. At the Abbazia dei Santi Salvatore e Lorenzo in Badia a Settimo, just over nine miles away, Domenico's Annunciation — two roundels over the main arch — powers me through Mass ( In the sacristy afterwards, a priest silently flicks the lights onto a Nativity and Deposition — the grass beneath the cross is as fluffy as Dimora's lawn. In San Donnino, once an Arno-side village, now a suburb of Florence, is the church of San Andrea and two frescoes: Domenico's delicate Madonna and Child with two deliciously camp saints, and the Baptism of Christ, thought to be by his brother, David, as it's not quite as good (sorry David). The churchwarden, Lorenza, ushers me into an adjoining wing. It's the Museo d'Arte Sacra di San Donnino, a collection of Renaissance art that tells the story of the flood-prone village — most of these paintings were irreparably damaged in 1966. A St Roch by the Ghirlandaios looks desultory, his robes melted clean away by floodwater. Lorenza needs to go — it's Sunday lunchtime — but gives me her number, promising to open up again if I return. You wouldn't get that in Florence (free; At Badia a Passignano, 15 miles south, six Benedictine monks still live in the monastery where David and Domenico frescoed a Last Supper in 1476. The superior, Jinsho Kuriakose, takes us on a tour (by donation; Past three swashbuckling archangels painted by Ridolfo's protégé, Michele Tosini, we head to the refectory. This was the scene of a battle of wills, says Father Jinsho. David complained to the monks that they weren't feeding them enough; when the abbot refused to give them more, the brothers downed tools and left, making sure the fresco looked decent enough for the oblivious monks to pay them in full. I imagine them flouncing back to Colle Ramole as I drive back past an Antinori vineyard. I see that same hauteur in Ridolfo's face the next morning, when I bid him farewell ('Is he glaring at us or smiling?' Strozzi had asked when we'd popped in post-oil tasting). He's inscrutable: longish hair bobbed, Tuscan nose, eyes boring into my soul, while Domenico stares from above, lip imperceptibly curled. This is our house, they seem to whisper. And it always will be, I want to reply — but I'm delighted that Cecchi has brought you back to life. This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue Julia Buckley was a guest of Dimora Ghirlandaio, which has B&B doubles from £520 or villas from £781 ( The chapel can be viewed on request. Fly to Florence


Scotsman
6 hours ago
- Scotsman
'Use fire in belly the right way' - Luke Donald's Ryder Cup message to Bob MacIntyre
Ryder Cup captain reacts to Scot gesturing to American fan during PGA Tour event Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Luke Donald, the European captain, is aiming to get Bob MacIntyre using the fire in his belly in the 'right way' in next month's Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black in New York. During last week's BMW Championship, one of the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup Play-Off events, MacIntyre gestured to someone in the crowd after getting stick as he played in the same group as American Scottie Scheffler. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Bob MacIntyre gestures to someone in the crowd during the third round of the BMW Championship at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland | Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images After holing a putt at the 14th in the third round at Caves Valley in Maryland, the Oban man put a finger to his lips to silence the heckler before pointing in the direction of the culprit with his putter. 'If you give me crap, I'll give you crap back,' said MacIntyre when asked about the incident at the end of the round. 'If they do it outside the shot, it's fair game, but don't do it within the shot that's going to affect myself or Scottie.' On the back of his runner-up finish in the $20 million event, MacIntyre secured one of the automatic spots in the European team that will be defending the Ryder Cup on Long Island on 26-28 September. Speaking at a press conference on the eve of the Betfred British Masters hosted by Sir Nick Faldo at The Belfry, Donald was asked about MacIntyre interacting with the fan last weekend. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'I'm going to have obviously all those conversations once the team is set, and I've had conversations with certain players already to just kind of mentally get ready for that cauldron, that atmosphere,' said the Englishman. 'That's something I've been thinking about since day one of the captaincy. That is going to be a major feat how we react to the crowds, and certainly less is more.' Bob MacIntyre was furious after being heckled by a fan during last week's PGA Tour FedEx Cup Play-Off event in Maryland | Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images It was suggested to Donald that MacIntyre having 'fire in his belly' could only be a positive thing as the Europeans bid to land a first win on US soil in the biennial event since the 'Miracle at Medinah' in 2012. 'Just using it the right way,' he said, smiling, in reply to that. MacIntyre was unbeaten in three games on his debut in Rome two years ago, teaming up with Justin Rose to pick up one-and-a-half points from two fourball matches before beating Wyndham Clark, the US Open champion at the time, in the last-day singles. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Yeah, absolutely,' said Donald of how MacIntyre being retained for the second-day fourballs after being carried by Rose on the first day had probably helped him grow in stature as a player over the past two years. 'I think sometimes you see players that play in the Ryder Cup and they are not really ready and it probably has a negative effect on them. I think Bob took a little time to get into it Friday and Saturday. 'He was one of weakest statistically in Rome but is now one of strongest' 'But it helped him adjust and he really grew in confidence with that relationship and held his own on Sunday. For a rookie to get two-and-a-half points was pretty stout. 'I think it just gave him the confidence to know that even though he maybe didn't quite have his best that week he can still compete, and he's gone on to win the Canadian Open and Scottish Open. He's a top, top player. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'You look at his stats, out of the 12 guys, statistically in Rome he was one of the weakest, and now he is one of the strongest. He has improved by leaps and bounds.


Wales Online
10 hours ago
- Wales Online
Ronnie O'Sullivan's actions in TV studio were something pundit had 'never seen before'
Ronnie O'Sullivan's actions in TV studio were something pundit had 'never seen before' Ronnie O'Sullivan is no stranger to turning heads - and his former rival Ken Doherty says he was shocked at the Rocket's behaviour after his semi-final clash at the Saudi Arabia Masters Ronnie O'Sullivan raised eyebrows and turned heads at the Saudi Arabia Masters (Image: Getty Images) Snooker legend Ken Doherty admitted he was gobsmacked after witnessing Ronnie O'Sullivan's uncharacteristically joyous reaction in the TV studio following his unprecedented double 147 display. It was behaviour the Irishman says he's "never" seen from the Rocket before. On Friday, O'Sullivan, 49, once again etched his name into snooker folklore, becoming the first competitor ever to make two maximum breaks in the same match, achieved in his Saudi Masters semi-final against Chris Wakelin. The first of the two came right in the opener of the best-of-11 - and to underline his dominance, he added breaks of 134 and 142, dazzling fans with his consistency and flair. But it was his rare exuberance off the table that caught Doherty's eye. "I don't think he has ever been like that after a match," he said to the Express, via Betway. "When he came into the studio, we were having a good laugh with him, Ronnie was happy, was laughing his head off and normally he downplays everything, but he seemed really in a good place which was great to see." The Irishman was quick to praise the magnitude of the double 147 achievement itself. "They were just incredible," he said. "Just to witness that live and for it to be on TV was just unbelievable, it was unprecedented. It was historic and was absolutely amazing. But it is what Ronnie O'Sullivan does and it was an incredible best of 11 [frames], two 147 breaks, a 134 and a 142." Equally striking to Doherty was Ronnie's delight with his new piece of kit. "He was really happy with his new cue as well. I think the guy who made the cue for him, Sunny Akani, is going to be very busy over the next few months making cues for all different people. It was great to see him in good form, good spirits and playing so well." Article continues below Doherty says O'Sullivan was unprecedentedly jubilant after the semi-final (Image: Getty) Despite O'Sullivan occasionally flirting with retirement, Doherty feels there's plenty left in the tank. Recalling Ronnie's dramatic Saudi final against Neil Robertson, where he battled back from 7-2 down only to lose 10-9, he said: "The way he played and the level of which he played in, even in the final to come back from 7-2 down against Neil Robertson to go 9-8 up, I thought he was unlucky and Neil Robertson did really well to win 10-9. "But I thought Ronnie was unlucky with the couple of splits that he had and he could have won the game 10-8 or 10-9 because he was in the last frame as well. But Ronnie can go on for another few years and could even continue until he is 60 if he wants to." As someone who repeatedly locked cues with the Rocket during the '90s and early 2000s, Doherty believes an eighth world title remains O'Sullivan's great motivation. "I think Ronnie wants to win that elusive eighth world title and it will be high on his priority," he explained. Ken Doherty was knocked out in Round 2 of the Saudi Arabia Masters (Image: Getty) "He likes to play in the big tournaments. The Saudi event you could see how much it means to him; he was banging the table with frustration when things weren't going well which is a good sign that he really wants to win it. "He loves the big tournaments like the Saudi one, the Masters, the UK and the World Championship, which is his main priority. Ronnie loves winning and is a winner, he's always won and wants to keep winning and stay at the top for as long as he can." From his own experience of trying to stop O'Sullivan, Doherty emphasised the challenge of blocking out the Rocket's aura. "When you played Ronnie, you used to try not to think about who you were playing," he said. O'Sullivan and Doherty have enjoyed a healthy rivalry for years (Image: Getty) Article continues below "Play your own game and it was like trying to hold onto a racehorse but it was very difficult at times but you have to play your own game and concentrate about that because if you think about Ronnie's game all of the time, well then you are on the backfoot but if you can be confident in your own game. "I think that's what was so great about Neil Robertson, he focused on his own game and didn't worry about who was in the other chair or with it being Ronnie. It was an honour for him to play Ronnie, but it also inspired him and that's the attitude you need when you play against these great players." With O'Sullivan seemingly embracing the sport with fresh enthusiasm, Doherty believes snooker fans will be seeing plenty of Rocket magic for years to come. His verdict was clear: when Ronnie's in this frame of mind, absolutely anything is possible.