Certificate of Name
Fyokla
Feminine
Russian
Meaning & Origin
Fyokla (also spelled Fekla) is the Russian form of Thekla, a name of ancient Greek origin meaning "glory of God." The name is derived from the Greek Θεόκλεια (Theokleia), composed of the elements θεός (theos) meaning "god" and κλέος (kleos) meaning "glory." The earliest recorded bearer is the legendary Saint Thekla, a 1st-century virgin and martyr mentioned in the apocryphal Acts of Paul and Thecla. According to that text, Thecla, after hearing Saint Paul preach on chastity, rejected her arranged marriage and followed a life of asceticism, traditioning veneration across Eastern and Western Christianity. Her cult was particularly strong in the early Byzantine period, from where the name entered Slavic calendars through the Orthodox Church.Notable BearersIn Russian history, Fyokla appears most notably as the name of Fyokla Bezzubova (1880–1966), a Soviet and Russian folkloric narrator who preserved traditional Russian tales and bylinas. Another bearer is Fyokla Tolstaya (born 1971), a Russian journalist, cultural figure, and television and radio presenter. The name also features in fiction: Fyokla Ivanovna appears as the domineering matchmaker in Nikolai Gogol's play Marriage, where her character underscores the overturn of generational rigor and arranged marriage — a thematic echo of Saint Thecla's own story.Linguistic and Cultural ContextFyokla is an archaic name in modern Russian, rarely given to newborns today but still recognized for its association with classical literature and Orthodox tradition. Its variant, Fekla, is a transliteration of the same Russian spelling Фёкла. Internationally, the name appears cross-culturally: as Tekla and Tecla in Sweden, Poland, and Spain; Thecla in English; Theokleia in ancient Greek. The root element here acts across many societies, preserved in matriarchal baptismal practices courtesy the ubiquitous veneration of Thecla/Tecla/Tekla.Meaning: “glory of God”Origin: Ancient Greek via Russian through Christian mit traditionType: Russian feminine first name/predominant usageRegions: Russia, with cognates across Western EuropeReligious associations: The Early Christian Saint Thecla (Eastern Orthodox canonical name, widely influential until the modern era religious tradition maintains its presence)
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