Male Names I Like From My Genealogy J-Z

  1. Mathias
    • Origin:

      Spelling variation of Mattias, Greek
    • Meaning:

      "gift of God"
    • Description:

      Matthias is the ancient Biblical form of Matthew, widely used along with brother Mathias in the US for the past 20 years.
  2. Mathieu
    • Miles
      • Origin:

        English form of Milo
      • Meaning:

        "soldier or merciful"
      • Description:

        Miles, which has a permanent veneer of cool thanks to jazz great Miles Davis, is a confident and polished boys' name that's an American classic. Always ranking in the US Top 1000, it's been drifting up the charts for the past half century but has never been TOO popular.
    • Miesco
      • Nicholas
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "people of victory"
        • Description:

          Nicholas is derived from the Greek Nikolaos, a name that evolved from the components nikē, meaning "victory", and laos, "people." It shares origins with Nike, the name of the Greek goddess of victory. Nicholas is also a New Testament name that is well-used in literature, such as in Dickens's Nicholas Nickleby.
      • Owain
        • Origin:

          Welsh variation of Eugene
        • Meaning:

          "born of sheep"
        • Description:

          Owain is much more unusual than its brother name Owen, and feels a little more rugged, a little more adventurous and ancient.
      • Peter
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "rock, stone"
        • Description:

          Peter is derived from the Greek Petros, meaning "rock" or "stone." One of the most important figures in the Christian hagiography is Saint Peter, keeper of the Gates of Heaven. Born Simon bar Jonah, he was given the nickname Peter by Jesus, to signify that he would be the rock on which Christ would build Christianity. Centuries later, there was Peter the Great, the czar who developed Russia as a major European power.
      • Phillip
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "lover of horses"
        • Description:

          Spelling variation of Philip. Exactly as many baby boys were named with the single 'l' spelling in 2017.
      • Pierre
        • Origin:

          French variation of Peter
        • Meaning:

          "rock, stone"
        • Description:

          One of the most familiar — if not stereotypical — Gallic names. Pierre was a Top 5 name in France from the 19th century through 1940 and is now on a steady decline in its native land. In the US, Pierre was most common in the 1980s but it has never cracked the Top 300.
      • Piers
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "rock"
        • Description:

          Piers was the first version of Peter to reach the English-speaking world, via the Normans, but it's never made it in the US, despite its large measure of understated panache. This might change due to the high visibility of TV personality and former news editor Piers Morgan.
      • Pietes
        • Ralph
          • Origin:

            English from German
          • Meaning:

            "wolf-counsel"
          • Description:

            Ralph has two diametrically different images: there's the suave Ralph Fiennes-type Brit (often pronounced Rafe), and then there's the Jackie Gleason blue-collar, bowling blowhard Ralph Kramden bus driver. It's all in the eye of the beholder, though its hip factor did rise when it was chosen for his son by cool U.K. actor Matthew Macfadyen.
        • Randle
          • Ranulph
            • Origin:

              Scottish variation of Randolph
            • Meaning:

              "shield-wolf"
            • Description:

              An old name still occasionally heard in the U.K., but still and perhaps forever a foreigner in the U.S. Can be spelled Ranulf.
          • Rees
            • Rhys
              • Origin:

                Welsh
              • Meaning:

                "ardor"
              • Description:

                There's Rhys and there's Reese (now more popular for girls) and there's Reece, and we particularly like the traditional Welsh spelling, which entered the list in 2004, possibly influenced by Jonathan Rhys Meyers, of The Tudors, and Welsh-born actor Rhys Ifans.
            • Rice
              • Origin:

                English nature name
              • Description:

                Rice is really stretching the nature name boundary to its outer edges. But you may want to take it that far.
            • Roger
              • Origin:

                German
              • Meaning:

                "famous warrior"
              • Description:

                In the World War II era, Roger had nothing but the most positive associations, actually used by military personnel to mean 'Received and understood'--or A-OK, and though it is now on extended furlough, it does have a long and distinguished history. Introduced to England after the Norman Conquest of 1066, Roger soon became very popular there, with nicknames Hodge and Dodge, and had a long run later in the U.S, remaining in the Top 100 for 55 years.
            • Rowland
              • Origin:

                Rowlando, Rowlands, Rowlandson
              • Description:

                See ROLAND.
            • Rupert
              • Origin:

                German variation of Robert
              • Meaning:

                "bright fame"
              • Description:

                Rupert is a charming-yet-manly name long more popular in Britain (where it's attached to a beloved cartoon bear) than in the U.S. Yet we can see Rupert as a more stylish, modern way to honor an ancestral Robert.