Sanchia or Sancha or Sancia is a feminine given name of Spanish and Portuguese origin from Latinsanctus or sancta, meaning holy or saint. The name, which has multiple forms, is the feminine version of the Spanish and Portuguese name Sancho.[1]
Usage
The name was in use in the Anglosphere and throughout Europe by the Middle Ages in multiple forms and all have been in occasional use in English-speaking countries since that time. Feminine variants used in the Anglosphere have included Saincte, Saint, Sainte, Saints, Sancha, Sanche, Sanchee, Sanchia, Sanchie, Sancia, Sancta, Sanctia, Sanzia, Sence, Sense, and Zanchy.[2][3] Another source noted forms in use during the medieval era included Science, Sciencia, Scientia, and Senses.[4]
French feminine variants Saincte, Sainte, Saintes, Seincte, Xainte, Xaintes, and diminutives Sancelina, Sanceline, Saintine, and Xaintine were also in use as given names in the French-speaking world in the 1500s.[5][6][7] An Occitan version of the name is Sància, a feminine version of Sanç.[8]
The name and its variants have traditionally been given to children of both sexes in reference to All Saints' Day.[10] Some children have been given the full name All Saints, or Santos, dos Santos, or de Todos los Santos. For example, Spanish king Felipe IV and his daughters, Leonor, Princess of Asturias and Infanta Sofía of Spain, all have the name de Todos los Santos, or All Saints in English, as a middle name.
^ Charbonneau, Karen (March 17, 2023). American Baby Girl Names: 1587-1920s. Post Falls, Idaho: A Ship's Cat Book. p. 922. ASINB0BYTTGH3L.
^ Monk, Kate (1997). "Kate Monk's Onomastikon". tekeli.li. tekeli.li, privately compiled and originally published on the privately owned website Onomastikon. Retrieved 1 January 2024.