Where did James Bond get his famous name and number from?

James Bond's Name
23rd April 2004

Ian Fleming wished to give the creation that would become the most enduring cultural icon of the late twentieth century a plain, simple name. According to Fleming "One of my bibles out here is James Bond's birds of the West Indies... James Bond sounded perfect".

Sometime later, the real James Bond was passing through customs (as Terence James Bond) and was faced with continuous jokes about Beretta's and, more recently, Walther's.

There has been much conjecture about Bond's name and number. What is he Bonded to? Queen and Country?

The origin of the number 007 is as clear-cut as the name James Bond. John Dee, the 'eyes of Queen Elizabeth I, was known by this number when working for English intelligence against the Spanish.

Right: The cover of "Birds of the West Indies"

 
UK - MI6 Price: £11.35
USA - MI6 Price: $16.10


Martin Bond
 

The motto 'non sufficit orbis', first mentioned in "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" owes something to a family in Dorset, rather than to the Bond street that Bond suggested in the film.

Martin Bond, of the Dorset clan of Bond's, realised as soon as "The World Is Not Enough" came out that it was his motto and crest that were being used, although the word order of the motto and the crest itself both bear slight differences to 007's own.

He says "I have always thought it a meaningless motto, but when I saw the film title I immediately thought it must have a connection to us."


Therefore Bond's supposed parents, Andrew Bond and Monique Delacroix his Swiss wife, must be part of an elaborate cover, although Martin of Wareham near Poole admits, "I can't find any trace of him in the family history but he must be one of ours..."

"He must have slipped through, but now he is claiming relationship to us, we will happily accept that... It makes for an entertaining addition to the family."

"I do not wish to be disrespectful to my ancestors or my cousins, but we Dorset Bonds have always been a pretty drab bunch, although always respectable".

Right: The Bond family crest and motto

 

Of course, there are many other James Bond's around, although for the vast majority of them, the endless jokes about the name must get tiresome. But Timothy Dalton met a James Bond who was close to his namesake's secret agent status, because when filming in Gibraltar for "The Living Daylights" he met an Royal Artillery Captain with the same name as 007, who and also had the same rank as John Gardner's 007.