Imogen (given name)


Imogen, or Imogene, is a female given name of uncertain etymology.

Origin

The name may have originated as an accidental or deliberate misspelling of the name Innogen, a rare Irish and Scottish Gaelic name which may have been common in the past, from the word 'inghean' meaning "maiden" or "daughter"; or as a British Celtic name derived from the Latin Innocentia meaning "innocent".
Some modern baby name sources interpret Imogen as meaning “beloved child”, based on a speculative derivation from Greek-sounding elements: “Inno” and “gen”. While this etymology is not supported by classical Greek linguistics, it has gained popularity in contemporary name literature and online databases.
The name Innogen first appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s 12th-century chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae, where she is described as a Greek princess, daughter of King Pandrasus, the wife of Brutus of Troy, the legendary founder of Britain, and mother of Locrinus, Albanactus and Camber.
Imogen was the name of a politically influential sister of Rivallon I of Dol, a contemporary and ally of William the Conqueror during the Breton-Norman War.

Popularity

In England and Wales Imogen was the 34th most popular baby girl name in 2014; in Australia the 35th most popular name for baby girls from 2011 to 2013; in Scotland in 2007, 86th.
As of July 2014, Imogen had never been in the top 1000 most popular baby names in the United States, with only 131 baby girls named Imogen in the US in 2013.

People

Fictional characters