A mother has been banned from naming her baby Cyanide after the poison.
The woman, from Powys, Wales, also chose the name Preacher for the
girl's twin brother, saying she had a human right to name her own
children.
She said Cyanide was a "lovely, pretty name" with positive connotations
as it was taken by Hitler before he shot himself.
The Court of Appeal ruled the "unusual" choices might harm the children.
The infant twins, as well as the mother's other children, have been taken from her care.
When Powys council social workers learned of the names the mother had chosen for the twins, they took the case to court.
In June, a judge issued an injunction against the mother, forbidding her from formally registering the twins' forenames.
Lawyers appealed, claiming a violation of the woman's right to respect
for family life.
But Lady Justice King said naming a little girl after a "notorious
poison" was simply unacceptable.
Although there was nothing seriously objectionable about the name
Preacher, she ruled both twins' names should be chosen by their older
half-siblings.
Lady Justice King said "even allowing for changes in taste, fashion and developing individual perception", Cyanide was a very odd name to give to a baby girl.
The mother said Cyanide was linked with flowers and plants and was
"responsible for killing Hitler and Goebbels and I consider that this
was a good thing".
Lady Justice King said the courts would intervene to prevent a parent
naming a child "in only the most extreme cases".
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