[Opinions] Well, it's been used by Agatha Christine in a novel
in reply to a message by Julia
Which means that it's been around since at least the '20s, and Christie used English names of her time period. I'm fairly sure that it's legit, she was not an author to make up names.
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Magdala.  ·  Siri  ·  12/28/2007, 6:13 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Arcadia  ·  12/29/2007, 11:39 AM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Schuyler  ·  12/29/2007, 9:56 AM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Gabrielle  ·  12/29/2007, 9:53 AM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Murasaki (on a different computer)  ·  12/29/2007, 4:07 AM
Re: Magdala.  ·  KatjaKai  ·  12/29/2007, 2:57 AM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Aine  ·  12/28/2007, 11:55 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Lizzie_Jay  ·  12/28/2007, 10:41 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Rowena  ·  12/28/2007, 7:42 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Melania  ·  12/28/2007, 6:51 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Julia  ·  12/28/2007, 6:38 PM
Well, it's been used by Agatha Christine in a novel  ·  Siri  ·  12/28/2007, 7:14 PM
Re: Well, it's been used by Agatha Christine in a novel  ·  Tassiegirl  ·  12/28/2007, 7:58 PM
Magdalene means "from Magdala."  ·  Octavia  ·  12/28/2007, 8:01 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  Array  ·  12/28/2007, 6:22 PM
Margalo is awesome, but it would never get past ~X..  ·  Siri  ·  12/28/2007, 6:23 PM
Re: Magdala.  ·  LMS  ·  12/28/2007, 6:15 PM
Interesting.  ·  Siri  ·  12/28/2007, 6:24 PM
Agree on Miriam  ·  Murasaki (on a different computer)  ·  12/29/2007, 4:10 AM
Off topic, but anyway-  ·  Tassiegirl  ·  12/28/2007, 8:01 PM
Re: Interesting.  ·  LMS  ·  12/28/2007, 6:27 PM