Meaning:
Its source is Helene, a Greek name meaning "Sun ray."
In French, this name is spelled with accents -- Héléna.
Languages:
This girl's name is used in English, French, Polish, Serbian, Croatian, Czech, Norwegian, Swedish and Danish.
Alternative Spellings: Helenna and Hellena
Non-English Forms: Jelena and Yelena
Popularity:
The name Helena ranked 589th in popularity for females of all ages in a sample of 2000-2003 Social Security Administration statistics and 594th in popularity for females of all ages in a sample of the 1990 US Census.
Narrative:
This name might refer to a Greek person, a ''Hellene.''
The sources of its popularity balance between a saint and a sinner.
On one hand, there is St. Helena, mother to Constantine the Great, whose purity allowed her to discover the True Cross. On the opposite hand, there is the notorious Helen of Troy, whose adulterous flight in the arms of the Trojan prince Paris ''launched a thousand ships'' (in the words of Christopher Marlowe) and started the bloody Trojan War.
The image of the latter Helen's bewitching beauty has lasted through the ages. In a film version of Marlowe's 16th-century play Faustus, the devil offers Helen (portrayed by Elizabeth Taylor) to the title character in exchange for his soul. Faustus swiftly agrees to the bargain.