[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":102},["ShallowReactive",2],{"name-oliver":3},{"slug":4,"name":5,"gender":6,"pronunciation":7,"meaning":8,"origin":9,"originDetail":10,"mbti":11,"culturalNotes":60,"famousBearers":61,"siblingNames":83,"seo":100},"oliver","Oliver","masculine","OL-ih-ver","Olive tree; symbol of peace, wisdom, and fruitfulness","Latin \u002F Old French","Oliver derives from the Old French 'Olivier', itself from Latin 'Olivarius' meaning olive tree planter. The olive branch was a sacred symbol of peace and divine favour across ancient Mediterranean civilisations. The name entered English through the Norman Conquest of 1066, then gained legendary status through Oliver — the wisest and most prudent of Charlemagne's twelve paladins in the medieval 'Song of Roland'. Charles Dickens cemented its cultural footprint with Oliver Twist (1838), and the name has dominated baby name charts across the English-speaking world since the 2010s.",[12,15,18,21,24,27,30,33,36,39,42,45,48,51,54,57],{"type":13,"percentage":14},"ENTJ",9.23,{"type":16,"percentage":17},"INTJ",8.17,{"type":19,"percentage":20},"ENFJ",7.84,{"type":22,"percentage":23},"ENTP",7.56,{"type":25,"percentage":26},"INFJ",6.92,{"type":28,"percentage":29},"INTP",6.41,{"type":31,"percentage":32},"ESTJ",5.88,{"type":34,"percentage":35},"ENFP",5.73,{"type":37,"percentage":38},"INFP",5.34,{"type":40,"percentage":41},"ISTJ",5.12,{"type":43,"percentage":44},"ESTP",4.97,{"type":46,"percentage":47},"ISTP",4.61,{"type":49,"percentage":50},"ESFJ",4.28,{"type":52,"percentage":53},"ISFJ",4.03,{"type":55,"percentage":56},"ESFP",3.74,{"type":58,"percentage":59},"ISFP",3.17,"Oliver has proven remarkably consistent across cultures and centuries. In Anglo-Saxon tradition the name carries connotations of intellectual steadiness — Oliver the paladin was celebrated not for reckless bravery but for measured counsel. In French culture it carries notes of nobility; the Olivier family was among France's oldest titled lineages. Shakespeare used the name in 'As You Like It' for a complex antagonist who undergoes profound moral transformation — suggesting the name's literary association with depth and inner conflict. In modern popular culture Oliver has shed any stodginess entirely: it consistently ranks #1 or #2 in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, and sits in the top five in the United States. Its appeal crosses class and geography — equally at home in a country manor or a city apartment.",[62,65,68,71,74,77,80],{"name":63,"note":64},"Oliver Cromwell","Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England (1599–1658)",{"name":66,"note":67},"Oliver Twist","Dickens' iconic orphan hero and the novel that made the name immortal (1838)",{"name":69,"note":70},"Oliver Hardy","Comedian, one half of the legendary Laurel & Hardy duo (1892–1957)",{"name":72,"note":73},"Oliver Stone","Oscar-winning director of Platoon, JFK, and Born on the Fourth of July (b. 1946)",{"name":75,"note":76},"John Oliver","British-American comedian and host of Last Week Tonight (b. 1977)",{"name":78,"note":79},"Jamie Oliver","Celebrity chef who made home cooking accessible to millions (b. 1975)",{"name":81,"note":82},"Oliver Sacks","Neurologist and author of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat (1933–2015)",{"boys":84,"girls":92},[85,86,87,88,89,90,91],"Henry","Theodore","Sebastian","Felix","Arthur","Edmund","Jasper",[93,94,95,96,97,98,99],"Charlotte","Eleanor","Violet","Isla","Matilda","Clara","Rosemary",{"description":101},"Discover the meaning and origin of the name Oliver — from its Latin roots and medieval legends to its cultural significance, MBTI personality insights, famous bearers, and perfect sibling name pairings.",1777302609243]