NameCensus.
Very Rare

Aundria

A feminine name derived from French meaning "wise leader".

Name Census estimates that about 700 living Americans carry the first name Aundria. The name is used almost exclusively for girls. The average person named Aundria today is around 43 years old, and the year with the single highest number of Aundria births was 1992 (30 babies).

This page is the full Name Census profile for Aundria. 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.

People living today

700

~ 1 in 489,649 Americans

Peak year

1992

30 babies that year

Average age

43

years old

2013 SSA rank

#16,887

Tracked since 1942

Census

Aundria in the 2020 Census

The 2020 Census recorded 675 people with the first name Aundria, which placed it at #16,636 in the published first-name tables. This is a snapshot of people who already had the name at the time of the Census.

The SSA sections elsewhere on this page answer a different question: how often parents gave the name to babies over time. The "people living today" figure on this page is different again: it is a current estimate built from SSA birth records and age-based survival rates, so the two numbers are not expected to match exactly.

2020 Census rank

#16,636

National first-name rank

People counted

675

675 in the published race/origin table

Per 100,000

0.2

People with this name in 2020

Largest reported group

White

41.0% of people with this name

Demographics

Ancestry and ethnicity for Aundria

In the 2020 Census race and Hispanic-origin table, the largest reported group for people named Aundria is White at 41.0%. The next largest groups are Black (39.7%) and Hispanic (11.6%). These figures describe the people who had the name in 2020, not any inherent property of the name itself.

The bar chart below shows how people with the first name Aundria described their own race and ethnicity on the 2020 Census form. The Census Bureau groups responses into six broad categories: White, Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Asian and Pacific Islander, American Indian and Alaska Native, and Two or More Races. When a category has too few respondents for a given name, the Bureau suppresses the figure to protect individual privacy, which is why some names show fewer than six slices.

Percentages are shown so the breakdown is easy to read across every published category. Because the 2020 Census first-name file also includes raw headcounts for each group, Name Census can show those alongside the percentages in the legend and hover tooltip.

Keep in mind that these are self-reported numbers. A first name does not determine a person's race or ethnicity, and the distribution you see here reflects the specific population who happened to carry the name Aundria at the time of the 2020 Census, not any inherent property of the name itself.

  • White41.0% · 277
  • Black or African American39.7% · 268
  • Hispanic or Latino11.6% · 78
  • Two or more races5.9% · 40
  • American Indian and Alaska Native1.6% · 11
  • Asian and Pacific Islander0.1% · 1

Popularity

Aundria: popularity over time

The SSA tracks Aundria from the 1940s through to the 2010s, spanning 8 decades of birth certificate data. The biggest single decade for the name was the 1990s, with 222 total registrations. Usage has dropped considerably from its 1990s peak. The most recent decade brought in only a fraction of the registrations that the name once attracted.

Babies born per year

081523301950196019701980199020002010

Decades

Aundria 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 Aundria during that decade, along with a combined total. This is useful for spotting eras where the name surged or retreated.

DecadeMaleFemaleTotal
1940s04646
1950s03131
1960s09292
1970s0176176
1980s0133133
1990s0222222
2000s06868
2010s01515

Geography

Where Aundrias live

The SSA's state-level files cover 4 states and territories. California, Texas, Florida recorded the most babies named Aundria, while Ohio, Florida, Texas recorded the fewest. The average across all reporting states is about 13 registrations each.

Origin

Meaning and history of Aundria

The name Aundria is a rare and intriguing moniker that has its roots in ancient history. Its origins can be traced back to the Greek language, where it likely derived from the word "andros," meaning "man" or "warrior." This connection suggests that Aundria may have been borne by strong and valiant individuals in the classical era.

One of the earliest known references to the name Aundria can be found in the writings of the ancient Greek philosopher Plato, who lived from 428 BC to 348 BC. In his dialogues, he mentions a character named Aundria, though little is known about this individual's significance or role in the text.

During the Byzantine period, which spanned from the 4th to the 15th century, the name Aundria gained some prominence. Historical records indicate that there was a Byzantine noblewoman named Aundria who lived in the 9th century and played a significant role in the political affairs of the empire.

In the medieval era, the name Aundria surfaced in various European regions, particularly in Italy and France. One notable figure bearing this name was Aundria di Firenze, an Italian painter and sculptor who lived from 1320 to 1389. Her work adorned many churches and palaces in Florence during the Renaissance.

As time progressed, the name Aundria remained relatively uncommon, but it continued to appear in various cultural contexts. In the 16th century, there was a French poet named Aundria Beaumont, whose work explored themes of love and nature. Unfortunately, little is known about her life beyond her literary contributions.

Another noteworthy individual with the name Aundria was a German mathematician and astronomer who lived from 1657 to 1734. Aundria Kepler made significant contributions to the field of celestial mechanics and is remembered for her work on calculating the orbits of planets and comets.

While the name Aundria has not been widely popular throughout history, it has been borne by a diverse array of individuals, each leaving their unique mark on the world. From ancient philosophers to Renaissance artists, medieval noblewomen to pioneering scientists, the name Aundria has been carried by those who have shaped the course of human civilization in their own remarkable ways.

People

Aundria + last name combinations

How many people share a full name with Aundria as the first name? Click a combination below to see the estimate, or search any pairing.

Related

Other names starting with A

Other first names starting with A with a similar number of bearers.

FAQ

Aundria: questions and answers

How many people in the U.S. are named Aundria?

Name Census puts the figure at roughly 700 living Americans. We arrive at this by taking every SSA birth registration for Aundria 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 489,649 US residents.

Is Aundria a common name?

We classify Aundria as "Very Rare". It ranks above 87.6% of all first names in the SSA dataset by living bearers. Across the full history of the data, 783 babies have been registered with this name.

When was Aundria most popular?

The single biggest year for Aundria was 1992, when 30 babies received the name. The fact that the average living Aundria is about 43 years old gives you a rough sense of which era contributed the most bearers who are still alive today.

How common was Aundria in the 2020 Census?

The published 2020 Census first-name tables recorded 675 people with the name Aundria, or 0.22 per 100,000 residents. That placed it at #16,636 in the national Census ranking for first names.

Why is the Census count different from the living estimate?

Because they measure different things. The Census figure is a count of people who had the name Aundria in 2020. The living estimate aims to answer a current question instead: how many people with the name are alive today, based on SSA birth records and age-based survival rates. Since one number is a 2020 snapshot and the other is a present-day estimate, they are not expected to be identical.

What does the Census say about the gender split for Aundria?

In the 2020 Census sex table, Aundria leans strongly female. 661 people counted with this name were female (98.1%), compared with 13 male bearers (1.9%). The Census view is a snapshot of people living with the name in 2020, while the SSA section above tracks births across time.

What does the Census say about the background of people named Aundria?

In the 2020 Census race and Hispanic-origin table, the largest reported group for people named Aundria is White at 41.0%. The next largest groups are Black (39.7%) and Hispanic (11.6%). These figures describe the people who had the name in 2020, not any inherent property of the name itself. The percentages in the chart above come from self-reported race and Hispanic-origin responses in the 2020 Census.

Which group reports the name Aundria most often in the Census?

White is the largest reported group for people named Aundria in the 2020 Census, accounting for 41.0% (277 people in the published table).

Why can the Census sex total and race total differ slightly?

The Census Bureau published separate 2020 tables for sex and for race/Hispanic origin, and the released figures can differ slightly because of privacy protection in the public files. That is why this page treats the gender section and the race/origin section as two related snapshots instead of forcing them into one identical total.

Does every first name have Census demographic data?

No. The public Census first-name release only includes names that met the Bureau's publication rules, so many rarer names in the SSA files have no Census demographic snapshot. When that happens, the SSA trend, gender history, and state sections still appear, but the 2020 Census demographic sections are omitted.

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 Aundria in that year. That makes it useful for spotting when the name rose, peaked, or faded.

Is Aundria a female name?

Yes, 100.0% of people registered as Aundria in the SSA data are female. 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 Aundria still being used today?

Yes. The SSA still recorded Aundria 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 Aundria 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.

How common is the name Aundria?

For a quick modern estimate, our sister site HowManyOfMe.org answers that in one glance, with the living-bearer count front and centre.

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There are 700 people

with the first name

Aundria

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