Colben is a masculine given name of Anglo-Saxon derivation, structurally analyzable as a compound of the Old English elements col (“coal” or “dark”) and beorn (“warrior”), thus semantically evoking the notion of a “dark-armored fighter.” Phonetically rendered in English as /ˈkɑl.bən/, it conforms to a bisyllabic CVC.CVN blueprint with initial stress, yielding both clarity of articulation and a balanced prosodic profile. Its usage in the United States has remained deliberately sparse—annual occurrences have fluctuated between 5 and 10 newborns from 2002 through 2013, corresponding to ranks in the 810–910 range—indicating a stable yet highly exclusive presence within contemporary Anglo-American naming practices. From a morphological standpoint, the orthographic variation “Colben” represents a modern adaptation of medieval precedents such as Colbán, while its cool, measured tonal qualities align with broader trends favoring concise, technically resonant appellations. In sum, Colben offers an analytical exemplar of a name that is at once historically grounded, phonetically precise, and demographically rare.