| Pronunciation | English: /juːˈdʒiːniə/ Greek: [evʝeˈnia] Italian: [euˈdʒɛːnja] Portuguese: [ewˈʒeniɐ] Galician: [uˈʃia] Spanish: [ewˈxenja] Catalan: [əwˈʒɛniə]  | 
|---|---|
| Gender | Female | 
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Greek | 
| Meaning | nobility or "well-born" | 
| Other names | |
| Related names | Eugenius, Eugenio, Eugene, Eugenie, Evgenia | 
Eugenia is a feminine first name related to the masculine name Eugene that comes from the Greek eugenes 'well-born', from eu- 'well' + genes 'born' (from genos).[1]
Variants include Eugénia (Portuguese), Eugénie (French), Eugènia (Catalan), Uxía (Galician), Evgenia (Greek: Ευγενία), Eugenija (Lithuanian) and Yevgenia or Yevgeniya (Russian: Евгения; also transliterated as Evgenia or Evgeniya) as well as Yevheniia in Ukraine.
Notable people
- Eugenia of Rome (died c. 258), Roman Christian martyr
 - Eugenia Smet (1825–1871), French nun, founder of the Society of the Helpers of the Holy Souls
 - Princess Eugenia Maximilianovna of Leuchtenberg (1845–1925)
 - Eugenia Abu, Nigerian journalist
 - Eugenia Bonetti, Italian nun
 - Eugenia Bujak, Lithuanian-Polish cyclist
 - Eugenia Calle (1952–2009), American cancer epidemiologist
 - Eugênia Câmara (1837–1879), Portuguese actress
 - Eugenia Caruso, Italian actress and screenwriter
 - Eugenia Cauduro (born 1968), Mexican actress
 - Eugenia Shi-Chia Chang, South African Member of Parliament
 - Eugenia Charles (1919–2005), Prime Minister of Dominica
 - Eugenia Cheng, British mathematician, educator, and concert pianist
 - Eugenia Chuprina (born 1971), Ukrainian poet, writer, and playwright
 - Eugenia Clinchard (1909–1989), American child actress
 - Eugenia Cooney (born 1994), American internet personality
 - Eugenia Errázuriz (1860–1951), Chilean patroness of the arts
 - Eugenia Falleni (1875–1939), Italian-Australian transgender man convicted of murder
 - Eugenia Gabrieluk (born 1967), Russian pianist
 - Eugenia Kisimova (1831–1885), Bulgarian women's rights activist
 - Eugenia Kuzmina (born 1987), Russian-American model and actress
 - Eugenia Mandzhieva (born 1985), Russian fashion model and actress of Kalmyk descent
 - Eugenia Manolidou (born 1975), Greek composer and conductor
 - Eugenia Malinnikova (born 1974), Russian mathematician
 - Eugenia L. Mobley (1922–2011), American dentist, college dean
 - Eugenia de Montijo (1826–1920), wife of Napoleon III of France
 - Eugenia Campbell Nowlin (1908–2003), American arts administrator, artist
 - Eugenia Paul (1935–2010), American actress and dancer
 - Eugenia del Pino (born 1945), Ecuadorian developmental biologist
 - Eugenia Popa (born 1973), Romanian gymnast
 - Eugenia Popescu-Județ (1925–2011), Romanian dancer
 - Eugenia Price (1916–1996), American author
 - Eugenia Rasponi (1873–1958), Italian noblewoman, suffragist, and businesswoman
 - Eugenia Ravasio (1907–1990), Italian Catholic nun and mystic
 - Eugenia Silva (born 1976), Spanish model
 - Eugenia Smith (1899–1997), claimed to be Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia
 - Eugenia Tsoumani-Spentza (died 2020), Greek politician
 - Eugenia Tymoshenko (born 1980), Ukrainian entrepreneur and activist
 - Eugenia Volodina (born 1984), Russian supermodel
 - Eugenia Washington (1938–1900), American Catholic historian, civil servant, and one of the founders of Daughters of the American Revolution
 - Eugenia Yuan (born 1976), American gymnast and actress
 - Eugenia Zukerman (born 1944), American flautist
 
Fictional characters
- Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan, a protagonist in The Help
 - Eugenia Randolph Lord, a character in One Life to Live
 - Eugenia Dermody, a character in season 1 of Ozark
 - Eugenia, a minor character in season 1 and 2 of Snowpiercer
 
References
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.