How common are these stereotypical names in their countries?

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Liam, Moira
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
>Scotland: Angus
>Spain: Francisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Antonio, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana
>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine
>Germany: Siegfried, Reinhardt, Johann, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, Sigmund, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Franziska, Hilda, Hildegarde, Helga, Ingrid
>Netherlands: Jan, Hendrik
>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio, Marco
>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Mikhail, Alexey, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middle-East: Mohammad, Abdullah, Ahmed
>Israel: Shlomo, David, Daniel, Benjamin, Isaac, Mordecai, Rebecca
>Japan: Akira, Yoko, Things that start with Hiro

>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav
Sven is fairly uncommon
Ragnar is extremely uncommon
Magnus is very common
Björn is semi-common
Gustav is extremely popular
Arvid, Oliver, Johan, Kalle/Karl and Emil are some of the most common names in my experience
either way, take this to

Moira isn’t common in Ireland but the rest are.

I've never met anyone called Nigel, but Ian and Oliver are somewhat common.

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Liam, Moira
all except Moira

>Nigel, Ian,
Not with anyone under forty. I don't think Nigel was ever common, but you used to get a fair few Ians.

>oliver
Reasonably common, but not enough to be considered stereotypical

>I've never met anyone called Nigel
It's a pretty old fashioned name these days. Farage has not helped with it either.

Nigel isn't stereotypical, it's pretty old fashioned. Pretty sure Oliver is still the most popular boys name

Russian names common as well.

Stereotypical names are usually older generation ones.

Ian and Oliver are somewhat common, Nigel not so much, but it's still around and I could see it eventually coming back into fashion, it's not completely dead like Erasmus, Wilbur or Herbert which I couldn't ever imagine giving to a baby, unless the baby was already 85 years old.

I'm a German on vacation, you don't see most of those names too often with younger people, it's mostly older middle aged people who have names like that.

I've never heard the name Erasmus.

It was the name of Charles Darwin's father.

Portugal: João
My name is João. My aunt is João. My mom is João. My dad is João. My grandpa is João.

Johann and Franziska is still quite common even with young people. The other all boomers or history.

Now we have rather things like Kevin and Ali.

...

I'm Scottish and I've literally met one Angus in my entire life.

The most common Scottish name I've encountered is James.

>Latin America, at least in Chile
Francisco is very common
Rodrigo not so much
Javier is semi common (Javiera is way more used)
Antonio is usually used as a second name rather than a first name
I haven't meet a man called Alfonso yet
Alberto is for old people
Fernando is extremely common
Alejandro, as Antonio, is more used as a second name
Every guy called Juan is known by his second name (every Juan José is called Jose)
Enrique is for old people
Jorge is very common
Luis too
José is very uncommon as a first name
Esteban became common in the previous generation
Pedro not so common
Manuel is fairly common
Carlos is very common
María is extremely common
Ana is an old people name
Jesús is extremely uncommon in men, and way more used in women, especially high society girld who are called María Jesús or something like that

All the names of Spain with the exception of Alejandro are mostly boomers. Right now: Hugo, Pablo, Daniel and Alejandro.
Catalonia: Marc.
Basqueland: Iker.

>Wales: Dafydd
Loads of Dafydds here.

+Robert

I’ve met three British people in my life, one Mohammed, one Raj and one other pajeet name I can’t recall

I don’t know anyone called Ian