|      When Jorge    Mario Bergoglio won the papal conclave's vote for new pope today (March    13), he also announced his new name: Francis I, or Francesco    I in Latin. The name is a reference    to Saint Francis of Assisi, a venerated    Catholic friar who lived in the 13th century. Saint Francis    is patron saint of animals and the environment. He was known for his    dedication to poverty and reform, which may send a signal about the new    pope's concerns. But popes didn't always    pick a papal moniker, also known as a regnal name. And today, they rarely get    overly creative with the choice. In other words, while    Americans are increasingly in search of unique baby names, don't expect to    see a Pope Jayden or Pope Phoenix anytime soon. "In one sense, this    is the most tradition-bound of naming decisions," wrote Laura Wattenberg, a baby-naming expert, on her blog Baby    Name Wizard. "The name must be a deep and pure reflection of Catholic    history and values." A history of    papal names The first pope to rename himself was Pope John II, who headed    the Catholic Church from A.D. 533 to A.D. 535. John II was born    Mercurius, a name that honored the Roman god Mercury. The new pope felt that    a name derived from Roman mythology wasn't appropriate for the head of    Christianity, so he decreed that he would henceforth be the appropriately    Biblical John II. [Papal Primer: History's 10 Most Intriguing Popes] Not every pope followed    suit, but most popes began picking regnal names for themselves by the 10th    century. Pope Marcellus II was an exception to the rule — elected in 1555, he    kept his birth name, more or less. (Marcellus II was born Marcello Cervini    degli Spannochi.) No pope since has kept his birth name. Naming today's    popes Want to raise a pope?    While a baby name may not do the trick, if you wanted to stick with pope-ly    ways, you'd be smart not to get creative with naming choices. According to    Wattenberg, four names (John, Benedict, Gregory and Clement) have accounted    for 55 of the 129 popes who have ruled since re-naming became the norm. Nevertheless, names send    strong signals, Wattenberg wrote. Cardinal Albino Luciani named himself John    Paul I after the two popes before him, a choice widely seen as a statement of    continuity. Sometimes popes aim for a    moniker more humble than their birth name. Pope Sergius IV (1009-1012) was    born Pietro, or Peter, a name that harkened back to the Church's first Pope,    Saint Peter.  In other cases, naming    conventions get a bit odd. There has been a Martin I, Martin IV and a Martin    V, but no Martin II or III. That's because two popes named Marinus were    mistakenly recorded as Martins by some sources, mixing up the numbering    system. Popularity of    pope names Pope naming conventions    don't track well with American naming trends, which skew toward increasingly    less popular (yet still trendy sounding) names. In the 1880s, John was the    No. 1 boy's name in the United States. By 2011, it had slid to No. 27. Even popular    baby names no longer account for the same proportion of names as they used    to; about 40 percent of boys in the 1880s bore one of the top 10 names.    Today, fewer than 10 percent do, according to a 2010 study.   Gregory ranked as the    279th most-popular boy's name in 2011; neither Clement nor Benedict made the    top 1,000. The new pope's name,    Francesco in Latin or Francis I, is a first for papal names. The name    Francesco did not rank above 1,000 before 1960 or after 2000 for baby boys    born in the United States, but it did reach the rank of 863 in the 1980s.    Francis peaked in popularity in the United States in 1910, when it ranked    31st for boys. As of 2011, the name ranked No. 618 in names for baby boys.   Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a    TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be    published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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