This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Beatrice/Beatrix doesn't mean "blessed"
Thanks for all the help!I would use Wendy, I love that name, but I know it wasn't invented in the 1800s (unless it's the late 1800s). It was actually invented for the character Wendy Darling in Peter Pan. James M. Barrie (Peter Pan's author) had a friend who was a little girl. Her nickname for him was Friendy, but she couldn't say her Rs correctly, so she called him Fwendy. When Sir Barrie was stuck on a name for his little mother, he took the F off of Fwendy and came up with Wendy!If you can't tell, I'm a Peter Pan fanatic -- more so of the book than of Disney's awful version that was way off the story.
vote up1vote down

Replies

I knew Wendy's probable origin*Does some searching*According to Wikipedia, Peter Pan first appeared in a 1902 book, "The Little White Bird". A play based on the 1902 book premiered on 27 Dec 1904. In 1906, a portion of "The Little White Bird" which featured Peter Pan was published as the book "Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens". Finally, in 1911, the novel "Peter Pan and Wendy", based on the play, was published.(See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Pan)I guess that would make Wendy inappropriate for your time setting.Miranda
vote up1vote down
Yes, that's all correct as well! :-)
vote up1vote down