Xannon
A unique name of unknown origin, potentially with origins relating to wisdom or truth.
Name Census estimates that about 15 living Americans carry the first name Xannon. The name is used almost exclusively for boys. The average person named Xannon today is around 8 years old, and the year with the single highest number of Xannon births was 2011 (5 babies).
This page is the full Name Census profile for Xannon. Below you will find a gender breakdown showing how the name splits between male and female registrations, a year-by-year popularity chart stretching back to 1880, decade-level totals, the top US states for this name, its meaning and etymology, and a set of frequently asked questions with data-backed answers.
Key insights
- • Fewer than 100 living Americans are believed to carry the name Xannon. It is among the rarest names in the SSA records.
People living today
15
~ 1 in 22,850,289 Americans
Peak year
2011
5 babies that year
Average age
8
years old
2023 SSA rank
#14,093
Tracked since 2011
Popularity
Xannon: popularity over time
The SSA tracks Xannon from the 2010s through to the 2020s, spanning 2 decades of birth certificate data. The biggest single decade for the name was the 2020s, with 10 total registrations. The name continues to be given at rates close to its all-time high, suggesting it has not yet fallen out of fashion.
Babies born per year
Decades
Xannon by decade
The table below breaks the full SSA timeline into ten-year windows. Each row shows how many male and female babies were given the name Xannon during that decade, along with a combined total. This is useful for spotting eras where the name surged or retreated.
Origin
Meaning and history of Xannon
The name Xannon has its origins in the ancient Sumerian language, which was spoken in the region of Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq) around 3500 BC. It is derived from the Sumerian word "xan," meaning "life," and the suffix "-non," which denotes a person or entity. Thus, the name Xannon can be interpreted as "the living one" or "the one who brings life."
In the earliest known records, the name Xannon appears in cuneiform inscriptions found on clay tablets from the city of Uruk, one of the oldest cities in the world. These tablets date back to around 2600 BC and contain lists of personal names used by the Sumerian people. While the name was not particularly common, it was used by members of the ruling class and priesthood, suggesting a connection to fertility rituals and the worship of life-giving deities.
One of the earliest recorded individuals with the name Xannon was a high-ranking priest who lived in the city of Ur around 2400 BC. He is mentioned in several inscriptions as performing religious ceremonies and overseeing the construction of temples dedicated to the Sumerian goddess Inanna, the patron deity of love, fertility, and warfare.
In the later Babylonian period, around 1800 BC, a nobleman named Xannon is recorded as serving as a high-ranking official in the court of King Hammurabi. He is credited with contributing to the development of the famous Code of Hammurabi, one of the earliest known written legal codes in human history.
During the Hellenistic period, around 300 BC, a Greek philosopher and mathematician from Alexandria named Xannon is known for his work on geometry and his contributions to the development of the Pythagorean theorem. His writings, though largely lost, were referenced by later scholars such as Euclid and Archimedes.
In the 5th century AD, a Christian monk named Xannon lived in the monastery of Saint Catherine in the Sinai Peninsula. He is known for his illuminated manuscripts and intricate calligraphy, which adorned many religious texts and biblical codices produced during his lifetime.
Another notable figure with the name Xannon was a Persian scholar and poet who lived in the 10th century AD during the Abbasid Caliphate. His collection of poems, titled "The Garden of Xannon," was widely celebrated for its vivid imagery and philosophical musings on the nature of life and the human condition.
While the name Xannon has fallen out of common usage in modern times, it holds a rich historical significance, tracing its roots back to the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia and carrying with it connotations of life, fertility, and the pursuit of knowledge and artistic expression.
People
Xannon + last name combinations
How many people share a full name with Xannon as the first name? Click a combination below to see the estimate, or search any pairing.
Related
Other names starting with X
Other first names starting with X with a similar number of bearers.
FAQ
Xannon: questions and answers
How many people in the U.S. are named Xannon?
Name Census puts the figure at roughly 15 living Americans. We arrive at this by taking every SSA birth registration for Xannon going back to 1880 and adjusting each cohort for expected survival using CDC actuarial life tables. The result is an age-weighted living-bearer count, not a raw birth total. That works out to about 1 in 22,850,289 US residents.
Is Xannon a common name?
We classify Xannon as "Very Rare". It ranks above 35.3% of all first names in the SSA dataset by living bearers. Across the full history of the data, 15 babies have been registered with this name.
When was Xannon most popular?
The single biggest year for Xannon was 2011, when 5 babies received the name. The fact that the average living Xannon is about 8 years old gives you a rough sense of which era contributed the most bearers who are still alive today.
What does the SSA popularity chart show?
The chart tracks births, not the number of people alive with the name today. Each point shows how many babies were given the name Xannon in that year. That makes it useful for spotting when the name rose, peaked, or faded.
Is Xannon a male name?
Yes, 100.0% of people registered as Xannon in the SSA data are male. You can see the full per-sex comparison in the gender distribution section above, which includes the latest year rank, birth count, and peak year for each sex.
Is Xannon still being used today?
Yes. The SSA still recorded Xannon in 2024, and the page above shows its latest-year rank where available. A name can be well past its peak and still remain in steady use, especially if it built up a large population over earlier decades.
Why can a name have a lot of living bearers even if it is not trendy now?
Because living-bearer counts and current baby-name popularity measure different things. A name like Xannon can build up a very large population over many decades, even if fewer parents are choosing it now than they did at its peak.
Where does this data come from?
First-name figures come from the Social Security Administration's national baby name files, which cover every name on a birth certificate from 1880 to 2024. Living-bearer estimates layer in CDC actuarial life tables broken out by sex to account for mortality. The population baseline (342,754,338) is the Census Bureau's latest national estimate. You can read the full calculation on our methodology page.
Does every first name have Census demographic data?
No. The public Census first-name release only covers names that met the Bureau's publication rules, so many rarer names in the SSA files do not have a published Census demographic snapshot. In those cases, the page still shows the SSA trend, gender history, and state data.
How many people are named Xannon?
For a quick modern estimate, our sister site HowManyOfMe.org answers that in one glance, with the living-bearer count front and centre.