Meaning & History
África is a Spanish given name derived from Africa, the name of the continent. While the continental name is of Latin origin, likely from the Afri people who lived near Carthage in North Africa, the personal name África is specifically associated within the Spanish-speaking world with the Virgin Mary under the title Nuestra Señora de África (Our Lady of Africa), the patron saint of the Spanish enclave of Ceuta in North Africa. This Marian devotion stems from the 15th-century Castilian conquest of the city, and the name is thus historically linked to a figure of deep religious significance in Spain and former Spanish territories.
Beyond its Iberian roots, the name Africa has been used in various cultures, notably among African-American parents as a rare given name. However, the Spanish form África carries distinct connotations of Catholic veneration, and parallels exist in other Romance languages, such as the Catalan Àfrica. The name is largely confined to Spanish usage and is rare in English, yielding to the continental form.
Cultural Significance
By naming a daughter África, parents choose a prefix that blends geography, religious history, and imperial legacy: the name simultaneously invokes a continent (the world's second-largest after Asia, according to conventional accounts) and a specific, minorkey-focused—make it explicit:
Related Names
Sources: Wikipedia — Africa