Etymology & Historical Origin of the Baby Name North
North really isn’t a given name, but recently the celebrity couple Kanye West and Kim Kardashian put it on the map when they named their baby girl North West in June of 2013. We also discovered that 13 baby boys were given the name North in 2012 (so far, we can’t find any other evidence of this name for girls other than little Miss West). Still, given North’s recent media attention, we thought this was a name worth looking at. When asked by Barbara Walters on “The View”, North West’s grandmother Kris Kardashian had this to say: “The way [Kim] explained it to me, north means highest power, and North is their highest point together. I thought that was really sweet." We agree. That is sweet. Like “Sweet’n Low” sweet. Although we hate to be the bearer of bad news, Kimye, from an etymological perspective, your interpretation is arguably wrong. The original Olde English word for “north” was “norð”; it originated from the Proto Indo-European root “ner-“ meaning “below, down, under”, also “left” because when you're facing the rising sun (to the east), "north" is to your left. Supporting evidence can be found in the Sanskrit word for “hell” नरक (naraka) and the Greek word for “from beneath, under” (ενερθεν, enertha). Furthermore, the Olde English word “suð” (south) originally meant “sun, region of the sun”; “east” (east) came from “austra” meaning “toward the sunrise” derived from the Proto Indo-European root “aus-“ meaning “to shine”; and finally “west” (west) from the PIE root “we-“ meaning “to go down” in reference to the direction where the sun sets. Of course most people associate the directions north with “upwards” and south with “downwards” because of their respective locations when facing a conventional map as well as their symbolic positions in terms of where we conceive them to be. From an etymological perspective, North West actually has a double-dose of “down” when you consider the true origin of the words. Whoopsie-daisy! We don’t mean to be a “downer” on the subject, but those are the etymological facts.