The rise of the name Muhammad across Europe
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Parts of Europe have seen a 700% rise in baby boys being named Muhammad or another variation since the Millennium.

One in 200 boys born in Austria today will be called either Muhammad, Mohammed, Mohammad, Mohamed and Mohamad, official statistics suggest. 

For comparison, Daily Mail analysis shows the equivalent rate stood at around one in every 1,670 in 2000.

Last year in England and Wales, 3% of boys were named Muhammad or one of four variants common in Islamic culture. In some areas, this figure rose to 9%, as other data indicated.

Many Muslims of Pakistani, Bangladeshi or Indian heritage regard it as a blessing to give a baby the name of the prophet, the founder of Islam.

The growth of Muslim communities in the UK due to immigration, alongside the influence of sports figures like Mohamed Salah, likely contributes to this trend, experts suggest.

The Daily Mail audit involved trawling official baby naming figures from 11 European countries. 

Datasets for some, including Germany – which has seen the most Muslim refugees arrive in the last decade – were not publicly accessible in full. 

Because of the numerous spelling variants and their different popularity in various countries, the audit grouped the five most common spellings together.

Behind England and Wales, the nation with the highest rate was Belgium. 

There, just over 1% of boys born in 2024 were given one of the five names – up from 0.5% in 2000.

Similarly high figures were seen in France (0.87%) and the Netherlands (0.7%). 

Meanwhile, the rate in some countries stayed relatively static, while others saw a decline in the prevalence in recent years.

However, given there are thirty-plus ways to spell the name, it’s likely the Daily Mail’s analysis underrepresents the true figure. 

Research from the influential Pew Research Centre estimated that Muslims made up 4.9% of Europe’s total population in 2017. 

Yet this would double to 11.2% by 2025 if migration continued at a ‘medium’ level, its projections showed.

The report stated: ‘In recent years, Europe has experienced a significant influx of asylum seekers escaping conflicts in Syria and other mainly Muslim nations. 

‘This migration wave has sparked discussions about immigration and security in many countries and brought up the issue of the present and future Muslim population in Europe.’

Robert Bates from the Centre for Migration Control noted: ‘Europe has witnessed an increase in migration from Islamic regions, as families and communities move westward for Europe’s comparatively greater prosperity and stability.’

Across all 11 countries in our audit, Poland had the fewest number of baby boys called Muhammad or one of the other spellings (0.01%) in 2024.

Polish governments have fought bitterly against EU migration plans over the years.

Mateusz Morawiecki, who served as Poland’s prime minister from 2017 to 2023, said when he left office that he didn’t want Polish culture to be ‘destroyed by the Muslim migrants coming from the Middle East or from Africa’.

An investigation into baby names by the Economist earlier this year found that in the past, migrants often felt pressure to discard names that sounded too foreign, but as Europe becomes more diverse, the range of names has grown broader.

Instead of changing names, today many parents proudly select a name that preserves their cultural identity, seeing it as a statement of belonging rather than a barrier to integration.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) last month revealed that the top boys’ name in 2024 was Muhammad, for the second year running.

Some 5,721 boys were given the specific spelling of Muhammad in 2024, a rise of 23 per cent on the previous year.   

Mohammed, a different spelling, first entered the top 100 boys’ names for England and Wales 100 years ago, debuting at 91st in 1924.

Its prevalence dropped considerably in the lead up to and during WW2 but began to rise in the 1960s.

That particular iteration of the name was the only one to appear in the ONS’ top 100 data from 1924 until Mohammad joined in the early 1980s.

Muhammad, now the most popular of the trio in the UK, first broke into the top 100 in the mid-1980s and has seen the fastest growth of all three iterations since. 

The name means praiseworthy’ or ‘commendable’ and stems from the Arabic word ‘hamad’, meaning ‘to praise’. 

Alp Mehmet, of Migrationwatch UK, said: ‘This is not a surprise given the pace at which the Muslim population has grown. It more than doubled in 20 years. 

‘According to the census it went from just over 1.5 million in 2001 to just under 4 million in 2021. It is still growing. So, expect Muhammad to stay at the top of the pile for years to come.’

But the ONS, alongside most other European statistical bodies, only provide figures based on the exact spelling and do not group names.

If multiple spellings were grouped under one umbrella name, Theodore (8th in 2024, 2,761 and Theo (12th in 2024, 2,387) would have ranked above Noah (second-place 2024 name).

Therefore, because five spellings of Muhammad have been used for this data set, it has an advantage over other names. 

The different backgrounds of Muslims around the world partly explain the variation in spelling. 

For instance, the transliteration of the name from South Asian languages is more likely to yield Mohammed, whereas Muhammad is a closer transliteration of formal Arabic. 

Methodology 

The Daily Mail consulted various statistical institutes across Europe to find out which are the most popular names across the continent, before them comparing them to the number of live male births.

To find out the exact methods each country used to collect the data, please see their respective websites. 

For reasons of data protection, most of the countries did not include the number of names if it was less than five.   

France: Its numbers were provided by the French National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE).

Sweden: Its numbers were provided by Statistics Sweden.

Belgium: Its numbers were provided by the Belgian Statistical Office (Statbel).

Austria: Its numbers were provided by the Statistics Austria.

Switzerland: Its numbers were provided by the Federal Statistical Office.

Ireland: Its numbers were provided by the Central Statistics Office.

Poland: Its numbers were provided by Statistics Poland and the Braian app.

Denmark: Its numbers were provided by Statistics Denmark. For children born before 1996, the baby name statistics only include Danish nationals. 

Italy: Its numbers were provided by the Italian National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT).

Netherlands: Its numbers were provided by the Social Insurance Bank (SVB) and Statistics Netherlands.

United Kingdom: Its numbers were provided by the Office for National Statistics (ONS). 

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