Xenia (name)
Xenia (also Xeniya, Ksenia, Kseniya, Ksenija or Xena; derived from Greek ξενία xenia - "hospitality")[1] is a female name used mainly in Russia,[2] Ukraine, Belarus and Greece. In Spain, although it started to become more popular during the 1990s, it appears mainly in Galician Xenia [ˈʃenia], and in Catalan Xènia [ˈʃɛniə]. Related names include Oksana (Ukrainian: Ксенія, Оксана; Russian: Ксения, Оксана), Axana (Belarusian: Ксенiя, Аксана), Ksenija (Slovenia, Croatia, Lithuania; Ксенија, Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia); Kseniya (Bulgarian: Ксения); Xénia (Hungary), and Senja (Finland).
| Gender | female | 
|---|---|
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Greek | 
| Meaning | "foreigner", "outlander", "welcomed guest" "hospitality" | 
| Other names | |
| Related names | Ksenia, Kseniya, Oksana, Senja, Xena, Xeniya | 
- Greece: January 24
 - Czech Republic: November 27
 - Slovakia: June 2
 - Hungary: July 30
 - Finland: January 24
 - Russia: February 6
 - Poland: April 16
 
People with the name
    
    Ksenia
    
- Ksenia Antonova, Russian ice dancer
 - Ksenia Afanasyeva (born 1991), gymnast
 - Ksenia Chernykh, Russian orienteer
 - Ksenia Doronina (born 1990), figure skater
 - Ksenia Godunova (1582–1622), Russian tsarevna
 - Ksenia Jastsenjski (born 1982), figure skater
 - Ksenia Kablukova (born 1998), Russian ski jumper
 - Ksenia Kahnovich (born 1987), Russian fashion model
 - Ksenia Krasilnikova (born 1991), pair skater
 - Ksenia Lykina (born 1990), Russian tennis player
 - Ksenia Makarova (born 1992), figure skater
 - Ksenia Milevskaya (born 1990), Belarusian tennis player
 - Ksenia Milicevic (born 1942), French painter, architect and town planner
 - Ksenia Monko (born 1992), Russian ice dancer
 - Ksenia Ovsyannikova (born 1985), Russian wheelchair fencer
 - Ksenia Ozerova (born 1991), Russian pair skater
 - Ksenia Palkina (born 1989), Kyrgyzstan tennis player but she was born in Khabarovskiy Kray, Russia
 - Ksenia Pervak (born 1991), Lykina's Russian compatriot and tennis player
 - Ksenia Pokrovsky, Russian-American iconographer
 - Ksenia Popova (born 1988), Russian swimmer
 - Ksenia Sankovich (born 1990), gymnast
 - Ksenia Semenova (born 1992), Russian world champion gymnast
 - Ksenia Sinitsyna (born 2004), Russian figure skater
 - Ksenia Sitnik (born 1995), Belarusian singer
 - Ksenia Smetanenko (born 1979), Russian ice dancer
 - Ksenia Solo (born 1987), Latvian-Canadian actress
 - Ksenya Stepanycheva (born 1978), Russian playwright
 - Ksenia Stolbova (born 1992), skater
 - Ksenia Sukhinova (born 1987), Russian beauty queen; winner of the Miss World 2008 pageant
 - Ksenia Svetlova (born 1978), Israeli member of parliament
 
Ksenija
    
- Ksenija Atanasijević (1894–1981), Serbian philosopher
 - Ksenija Balta (born 1986), decathlete
 - Ksenija Lukich (born 1990), Serbian-Australian model
 - Ksenija Milošević (born 1982), Serbian singer
 - Ksenija Pajčin (1977–2010), Serbian singer and model sometimes referred to as Xenia or Xenija
 - Ksenija Zečević (1956–2006), Serbian pianist
 
Kseniya
    
- Kseniya Agafonova (born 1983), athlete
 - Kseniya Boguslavskaya (1892–1972), Russian artist
 - Kseniya Karandyuk (born 1986), athlete
 - Kseniya Kachalina (born 1971), Russian actress
 - Kseniya Pryiemka (born 1986), athlete
 - Kseniya Rappoport (born 1974), Russian actress
 - Kseniya Simonova (born 1985), Ukrainian artist
 - Kseniya Sobchak (born 1981), Russian socialite
 - Ksenyia Tuhai (born 1995), Belarusian cyclist
 - Kseniya Ustalova (born 1988), athlete
 
Xenia
    
- Xenia, a theoretical founding ancestor of Haplogroup X (mtDNA)[3]
 - Xenia (singer) (born 1994), a singer in the finals of season 1 of the TV series The Voice
 - Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia (1875–1960), sister of Tsar Nicholas II
 - Princess Xenia Georgievna of Russia (1903–1965)
 - Xenia Borisovna(1582–1622) daughter of Tsar Boris Godunov
 - Princess Xenia of Montenegro (1887–1960)
 - Saint Xenia (disambiguation), several people
 - Saint Xenia the Righteous of Rome (died c. 450), 5th century Orthodox saint
 - Xenia Deli (born 1989), Moldovan-American model
 - Xenia Desni (1894–1962), Ukrainian actress of the silent era
 - Xenia Goodwin (born February 1994), Australian actress and dancer
 - Xenia Gratsos (1940–2018), Greek-American actress
 - Xenia Kalogeropoulou (born 1936), Greek actress
 - Xenia Boodberg Lee (1927–2004), American pianist
 - Xenia Onatopp, a fictional villainess from James Bond's GoldenEye
 - Xenia Seeberg (born 1972), German actress
 - Xenia Shestova (?–1631), Russian nun and mother of Mikhail I of Russia
 - Xenia of Saint Petersburg (c. 1719–1730 – c. 1803), patron saint
 - Xenia Tchoumitcheva (born 1989), Russian-Swiss actress
 
See also
    
- Xena
 - Xènius, male version, nom de plume of Eugeni d'Ors
 
Footnotes
    
- Other sources point the word ξένος [ksénos] - 'foreigner' as the origin of the name. It would be parallel to the Latin name Barbara which also means 'foreigner'.
 - Ксения [Ksenija], obsolete Аксинья [Aksin'ja] (diminutive Ксюша [Ksjusha])
 - Sykes, Bryan (July 2001). The Seven Daughters of Eve. W.W.Norton & Company Inc. (320 pages). ISBN 978-0-393-02018-2. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.