Flavia (name)

Flavia is an Ancient Roman name meaning “blonde” from the Latin word “flavus”, meaning “golden, blonde”. It is a feminine form of the Roman family name Flavius. The name is most commonly used in Italy, Romania, Brazil (Portuguese: Flávia) and in Spanish-speaking countries.[1] It is rarely used in the United States, but was given to 11 newborn American girls in 2010 and 12 American girls born in 2011.[2]

Flavia
The Ancient Roman name Flavia was used for Princess Flavia in The Prisoner of Zenda.
PronunciationFLAH-vee-ah or FLAY-vee-ah
GenderFemale
Origin
Word/nameAncient Roman
Meaninggolden, blonde; the feminine form of the Roman family name Flavius.
Region of originItaly, France, Brazil, Romania, Spain and other Spanish-speaking countries
Other names
Related namesFlaviana, Flavie, Flaviere, Flavyere

The Portuguese spelling of the name is Flávia.

Flavia is the name of Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox saints: Flavia Domitilla and Flavia. It was also the name of Princess Flavia, a major character in Anthony Hope's 1894 novel The Prisoner of Zenda and its sequel Rupert of Hentzau. It is also the name of Flavia de Luce, the 11-year-old sleuth who stars in Alan Bradley's mystery series that began with The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie in 2009.

Notable people

Fictional characters

  • Flavia Gemina, a character in The Roman Mysteries
  • Flavia de Luce, a character in the Alan Bradley mystery series

Notes

gollark: (a "turtle" is just a robot, due to LOGO influence)
gollark: Somewhat irrelevantly, the computer handling ethics is a repurposed laser defense turtle.
gollark: How sad for you.
gollark: Ethics level.
gollark: An ethicality of 0, I mean.
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