Mohammed, the most favourite name in UK
Mohammed, the most favourite name in UK
According to latest official statistics Mohammed, in all its various spellings, is now the favourite name for new-born boys in England and Wales.

London: Oliver is often considered to be the most common British name for baby boys, but according to latest official statistics Mohammed, in all its various spellings, is now the favourite name for new-born boys in England and Wales.

Although Oliver has overtaken Jack after 14 years, when variations of the Islamic Prophet's name were included, it came on top for the first time, given to 7,515 boys, compared to 7,364 Olivers.

Even without variant spellings, Mohammed was the most common boy's name in the West Midlands and the fourth most popular in London. In the south-west, however, it ranked 145th.

It was 16th overall. Its popularity was "symbolic of Britain's diversity," said Dr Justin Gest, an academician at Harvard and the London School of Economics and author of ‘Apart: Alienated and Engaged Muslims in the West'.

"Where we had many Johns and Jacks we also have plenty of Mohammeds now."

The figures, from the Office for National Statistics, showed that there were 3,300 boys named Mohammed, 2,162 called Muhammad, 1,073 Mohammads and 980 called either Muhammed, Mohamed, Mohamad, Muhamed or Mohammod.

Quoting experts, the ‘Daily Telegraph’ said the development reflected the name's overwhelming popularity among British Muslims rather than any "explosion" in the British Muslim population.

The figures, for 2009, showed the name had grown substantially in popularity in recent years, coming second the previous year once variants were included.

Muslims see Mohammed as "a paragon of excellence" and seek to emulate his life and follow his guidance, making the name an obvious choice for parents, Dr Gest said.

The figures also heralded the dawn of the age of Olives.

Olivia remained in first place for baby girls, chosen for 5,201, while Oliver was first for boys under the ONS rules, which count spelling variations as separate names.

The figures confirmed a revival in traditional names too, with Stanley, Austin, Frederick and Arthur replacing Blake, Jay, Corey and Zak in the top 100 for boys.

For girls, Evie has risen 157 places over the past 10 years to number 10, while Ruby has jumped 91 places to number two.

Maisie was the highest climber inside the top 100, up 29 places to 34, while Alisha, Keira and Libby all fell.

Perhaps reflecting a political swing, 1,378 boys were named Cameron. Just 14 were called Gordon, the same as the number named simply Baby.

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