Văn hóa / French Names
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French Names

Prénoms français

French names carry the imprint of one of Europe's most interventionist naming legal histories, shaped by nearly two centuries of state regulation before a decisive liberalization in 1993. A French name follows the Western given-name-first convention: one or more given names (prénoms) followed by a hereditary family name (nom de famille). The Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques (INSEE) tracks birth name data continuously, providing granular insight into how French naming fashions have shifted from religious canon to global pluralism over the past century. The defining legal moment in French naming history was Napoleon's Civil Code of 1803, which restricted new given names to those appearing on the Catholic saints' calendar or in recognized historical records. This law, intended to standardize civil registration across the Republic, meant that for nearly 190 years French parents could not freely choose their children's names. The practical effect was a highly concentrated pool of canonical names: Jean, Pierre, Marie, and their variants dominated French birth registers for generations. Deviations required petitioning a judge, who could reject names deemed contrary to the child's interest. The law of 8 January 1993 lifted the Napoleonic restriction, allowing parents to choose freely among any name, including regional, foreign, and invented names, subject only to a judge's power to reject names manifestly contrary to the child's welfare. The effect on French naming was immediate and dramatic: names from Breton (Loïg, Maiwenn, Erwann), Occitan (Alixèn, Thibaud), Basque (Itsaso, Gaizka), and Alsatian (Maxime, Clémence) traditions surged in the regions where those languages are spoken. International names—Léa, Emma, Nathan, Lucas—also entered the charts rapidly. Regional linguistic diversity gives French naming a geographic texture invisible in national statistics. Brittany's Celtic heritage produces name patterns distinct from Provence or Alsace. The overseas territories (DOM-TOM)—Martinique, Guadeloupe, Réunion, French Guiana—draw on Creole, African, and Indian Ocean traditions. Post-colonial immigration from the Maghreb (Mohammed, Yanis, Amina), sub-Saharan Africa (Aminata, Ibrahim), and Southeast Asia has further diversified the French name pool, particularly in the Île-de-France region.

Name Trends

Popularity data available from 1900 to 2024 (125 years).

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Popular Given Names

Họ hàng đầu

# Họ Bản ngữ Dân số
1 Martin Martin 235000
2 Bernard Bernard 120000
3 Thomas Thomas 110000
4 Petit Petit 105000
5 Robert Robert 100000
6 Richard Richard 95000
7 Durand Durand 90000
8 Dubois Dubois 87000
9 Moreau Moreau 85000
10 Simon Simon 82000
11 Laurent Laurent 79000
12 Lefebvre Lefebvre 77000
13 Michel Michel 75000
14 Garcia Garcia 73000
15 David David 71000
16 Bertrand Bertrand 69000
17 Morel Morel 67000
18 Fournier Fournier 65000
19 Girard Girard 63000
20 Bonnet Bonnet 61000
21 Dupont Dupont 60000
22 Lambert Lambert 58000
23 Fontaine Fontaine 56000
24 Rousseau Rousseau 54000
25 Vincent Vincent 52000
26 Leroy Leroy 50000
27 Chevalier Chevalier 48000
28 Faure Fauré 46000
29 Gilles Gilles 44000
30 Perrin Perrin 42000

Compare French Names With Other Cultures

See how French Names naming traditions compare to other cultures worldwide.