- Olga (name)
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Olga
An icon of St. Olga.Gender Female Origin Word/Name Old Norse Meaning holy Other names Related names Oleg, Helga Olga is a female given name, derived from Old Norse name Helga.[1] It is used in Russia (Ольга), Ukraine (Ольга, transliterated Ol'ha), Belarus (Вольга, transliterated Vol'ha), Poland, Czech Republic, Greece (Όλγα, Ólgha), Finland, Hungary, Romania, Serbia (Olga), Iceland, and Latin America. The Russian male equivalent is Oleg (Олeг).
Name days (St. Olga of Kiev): Bulgaria, Poland, Czech Republic, Greece and France – July 11, Slovakia – July 23, Russia – July 24, Hungary – July 27.
Contents
People with this name
Russian imperial family
- Saint Olga of Kiev (or Olha of Kyiv) (d. 969), wife of Igor, Grand Prince of Kiev
- Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia (1822–1892), second daughter of Nicholas I of Russia, wife to Charles I, King of Württemberg
- Grand Duchess Olga Feodorovna of Russia (1839–1891), wife of Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich of Russia
- Grand Duchess Olga Konstantinovna of Russia (1851–1926), Queen consort to George I, King of Greece; reigned as Queen regent of Greece in 1920
- Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia (1882–1960), sister of Nicholas II of Russia
- Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia (1895–1918), the eldest daughter of Nicholas II of Russia
Others
- Olga Appell (born 1963), Mexican-American long-distance runner
- Olga Barabanschikova (born 1979), a Belarusian former tennis player
- Olga Benário Prestes (1908–1942), a German-Brazilian communist militant
- Olga Björkengren (1857–1950), Swedish opera singer
- Olga Desmond (1891–1964), German actress and dancer
- Olga De Souza (a.k.a. Corona, born 1968), Brazilian singer of eurodance music
- Olga Dvirna (born 1953), Soviet middle distance runner
- Olga Fedori (born 1984), Ukrainian actress
- Olga Govortsova (born 1988), Barabanschikova's Belarusian compatriot and tennis player
- Olga Havlova (1933–1996), Václav Havel's first wife
- Olga Kaniskina (born 1985), Russian racewalker
- Olga Kazi (born 1941), Hungarian middle distance runner
- Olha Kobylyanska (1863–1942), Ukrainian writer
- Olga Korbut (born 1955), Belarusian gymnast
- Olga Kurban (born 1987), Russian heptathlete
- Olga Kurylenko (born 1979), Ukrainian model and actress
- Olga Markova (athlete) (born 1968), Russian long-distance runner
- Olga Markova (figure skater) (born 1974), Russian figure skater
- Olga Mikhaylova (born 1986), a Russian race walker
- Olga Morozova (born 1949), an USSR (now Russian) former tennis player
- Olga Panfyorova (born 1977), a Russian race walker
- Olga Puchkova (born 1987), a Russian tennis player
- Olha Saladukha (born 1983), Ukrainian athlete
- Olga Sandberg, (born 1844) Swedish ballerina
- Olga Savchuk (born 1987), an Ukrainian tennis player
- Olga Seryabkina (born 1985), Russian singer of girl group Serebro
- Olga Sosnovska (born 1972), Polish born UK/US based actress
- Olga Šplíchalová (born 1975), a Czech freestyle swimmer
- Olga Tañon (singer, born 1967) A Puertorican artist that is a Grammy Award, and Latin Grammy Award winner
- Olga Turchak (born 1967), Kazakh high jumper
- Olga Vigil (born 1970), Cuban basketball player
- Olga Vymetalková (born 1976), Czech tennis player
- Olga Zhitova (born 1983), Russian volleyball player
- Olha Zubaryeva (born 1958), Ukrainian handball player
- Michael Algar AKA "OLGA" (born 1962), singer of UK punk rock band Toy Dolls
Fictional characters
- Olga Gurlukovich, a fictional character from Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty
- Olga Pataki, character of Hey Arnold! animated series, Helga Pataki's older sister
- Olga Larina, Vladimir Lensky's fiancée in Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse Eugene Onegin
- Olga, one of the main characters in Sergei Lukyanenko's series of novels Night watch, Day Watch, and Twilight Watch
- Olga Sergeyevna Prozorova, character in Anton Chekhov famous drama Three Sisters
References
External links
This page or section lists people that share the same given name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. Categories:- Slavic feminine given names
- Russian feminine given names
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