Celia (given name)

Celia
Gender Female
Origin
Word/name Latin
Meaning Heaven, Blind, Musical
Other names
Related names Cecilia, Celeste, Celestina, Celie, Celja

Celia is a given name for females of Latin origin, as well as a nickname for Cecilia, Celeste, or Celestina. The name is often derived from the Roman family name Caelius, thought to originate in the Latin caelum ("heaven"). Celia was popular in British pastoral literature in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, stemming from Shakespeare's use in the play As You Like It. Celia is also the name of the main character in the series Celia's Journey, by Melissa Gunther.

Names with similar meanings in other languages

  • Kūlani ("heavenly", Hawaiian)
  • Silke (German)
  • Célia (French)
  • Celia (Polish)
  • Ουρανία ("heavens", Greek, pronounced "urania")
  • Cèlia (Catalan)
  • Celia (Spanish, Galician)
  • Célia (Portuguese)
  • Síle (Irish, Gaelic)
  • Silje (Norwegian)

People with the name

Literary Celias

  • Celia (As You Like It), a character in William Shakespeare's play As You Like It
  • Celia in Lionel Shriver's We Need To Talk About Kevin
  • Celia, the object of Strephon's obsession in Jonathan Swift's The Lady's Dressing Room
  • Celia Brooke, sister of Dorothea Brooke, the central character of George Eliot's Middlemarch (1873)
  • Celia Coplestone, in T. S. Eliot's The Cocktail Party
  • Celia Gálvez de Montalbán, in Elena Fortún's classic Spanish series of novels which began in 1929 with Celia, lo que dice
  • Celia Hamilton, in the Mandie series by Lois Gladys Leppard
  • Celia in Ben Jonson's "Song to Celia" from The Forest (another Celia also appears in Jonson's play Volpone, the wife of the merchant Corvino)
  • Celia Bowen in The Night Circus.
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