Nadezhda or NadeÃ
¾da (Cyrillic: ÃÂðôõöôð) is a Slavic female given name popular in Belarus, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Russia, Serbia, Ukraine and other Slavic countries to a lesser extent, as well as other former Soviet states such as Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan. The origin of the name in Old Slavic meant "hope", but this meaning was preserved only in Bulgarian, Macedonian and Russian. The name is a translation of the Greek name á¼ÂûÃÂïà(Elpis), with the same meaning.
The name entered the Russian culture as part of the trio: Vera, Nadezhda, and Lyubov as a calque from Greek of the names of saints Faith, Hope and Charity.
A Russian-language diminutive form of this name is Nadia (Cyrillic ÃÂðôÃÂ). The Belarusian version is Nadzeya (ÃÂðô÷õÃÂ, Ã
Âacinka: Nadzieja, like in Polish), the Ukrainian version is Nadiya (ÃÂðôÃÂÃÂ), and the Czech version is NadÃÂÃ
¾da, where it can also be shortened to Nad'a. In Serbo-Croatian, it can be shortened to more common Nada or NaÃÂa.
Transliteration variants include Nadejda, Nadeschda. Notable people with these names include:
In politics and public life
- Nadezhda Alliluyeva (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂûûøûÃÂõòð, 1901âÂÂ1932), second wife of Joseph Stalin
- Nadezhda Bondarenko (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂþýôðÃÂõýúþ, born 1950), Transnistrian politician and presidential candidate in the 2006 election
- Nadezhda Chaikova (ÃÂðôõöôð çðùúþòð, 1963âÂÂ1996), Russian correspondent known for exposés of Russian military atrocities and close contacts with the Chechen rebels
- Nadezhda Joffe (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂþÃÂÃÂõ, 1906âÂÂ1999), Soviet Trotskyist and daughter of Soviet leader Adolph Joffe
- Nadezhda Krupskaya (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂÃÂÃÂÿÃÂúðÃÂ, 1869âÂÂ1939), Russian Marxist revolutionary and wife of Vladimir Lenin
- Nadezhda Neynsky, (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂõùýÃÂúø, born 1962; formerly Nadezhda Mihaylova, ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂøÃÂ
ðùûþòð), MEP since 2009, Bulgarian foreign minister 1997âÂÂ2001, also leader of the Union of Democratic Forces from 2002 to 2005
- Nadezhda Sigida (ÃÂðôõöôð áøóøô, 1862âÂÂ1889), Russian revolutionary and central figure of the Kara katorga tragedy
- Nadezhda Stasova (1822âÂÂ1895), early Russian feminist and educator
- Nadezhda Tolokonnikova (ÃÂðôõöôð âþûþúþýýøúþòð, born 1989), political activist and artist, nicknamed Nadya Tolokno (ÃÂðôàâþûþúýþ); member of the feminist punk-rock collective Pussy Riot
- Nadezhda Tylik, a Kursk sailor's mother who was forcibly sedated on an internationally distributed news clip
- Nadezhda Vasilyeva (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂðÃÂøûÃÂõòð, died 1971), one of several women claiming to be Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia
Sports
- Nadezhda Alexandrova (, born 1986), Russian ice hockey player
- Nadezhda Belonenko (, 1911âÂÂ1964), Soviet-Russian tennis player
- Nadezhda Besfamilnaya (, born 1950), Soviet-Russian sprinter and Olympic bronze medalist
- Nadezhda Chizhova (, born 1945), Soviet-Russian shot putter and Olympic gold, silver and bronze medalist
- Nadia ComÃÂneci (born 1961), Romanian gymnast and a five-time Olympic gold medalist
- Nadezhda Evstyukhina (, born 1988), Russian weightlifter
- Nadezhda Frolenkova (/, born 1989), Ukrainian ice dancer
- Nadezhda Gumerova (, born 1949), Soviet-Kazakhstani long-distance runner
- Nadezhda Ilyina (, 1949âÂÂ2013), Soviet-Russian sprinter and Olympic bronze medalist
- Nadezhda Khnykina-Dvalishvili (, , 1933âÂÂ1994), Soviet-Georgian track and field athlete and Olympic bronze medalist
- Nadezhda Konyayeva (, born 1931), Soviet javelin thrower and Olympic bronze medalist
- Nadezhda Kosintseva (, born 1985), Russian chess player
- Nadia Marcinko (also NaÃÂa, NadeÃ
¾da Marcinková, born 1986), Slovak-American pilot
- NaÃÂa Mertová, Czechoslovak orienteering competitor
- Nadezhda Morozova (, born 1996), Russian ice hockey player
- Nadezhda Morozova (, born 1998), Kazakhstani speed skater
- Nadezhda Olizarenko (, , 1953âÂÂ2017), Soviet middle distance runner and Olympic gold and bronze medalist
- Nadia Petrova (, born 1982), Russian tennis player
- Nadezhda Ralldugina (/, born 1957), Soviet-born Ukrainian-Russian middle distance runner
- Nadezhda Stepanova (, born 1959), Soviet-Russian long-distance runner
- Nadezhda Torlopova (, born 1978), Russian boxer and Olympic silver medalist
- Nadezhda Vinogradova (, born 1958), Soviet heptathlete
- Nadezhda Wijenberg (, , born 1964), Soviet-born Russian-Dutch long-distance runner who represented the Netherlands at the Sydney Olympics in 2000
- Nadezhda Yakubovich (/, born 1954), Soviet-Belarusian javelin thrower
In the arts
- Nadezhda Babkina (born 1950), Russian and Soviet folk singer
- NadeÃ
¾da ÃÂaÃÂinovià(born 1947), Croatian philosopher, sociologist and author of Slovene descent
- NaÃÂa Konvalinková (NadÃÂÃ
¾da Konvalinková; born 1951), Czech actress
- Nadezhda Kadysheva (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂðôÃÂÃÂõòð, born 1959), Russian folk-rock pop singer, lead singer of the Golden Ring ensemble. Honorary Citizen of Bugulma. People's Artist of Mordovia, Honored Artist of Tatarstan. "Honored Artist of the Russian Federation" (1993)
- Nadezhda Vladimirovna Lermontova (1885âÂÂ1921), Russian painter
- Nadezhda Mandelstam (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂðýôõûÃÂÃÂÃÂðü, 1899âÂÂ1980), Russian writer and wife of poet Osip Mandelstam
- Nadezhda von Meck (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂþý ÃÂõúú, 1831âÂÂ1894), Russian widow best known for her relationship with Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
- Nadezhda Mikhalkova (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂøÃÂ
ðûúþòð, born 1986), Russian actress and daughter of Nikita Mikhalkov
- Nadezhda Misyakova (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂøÃÂÃÂúþòð, born 2000), Belarusian singer
- Nadezhda Obukhova (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂñÃÂÃÂ
þòð, 1886âÂÂ1961), Russian mezzo-soprano
- NadeÃ
¾da Petrovià(ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂõÃÂÃÂþòøÃÂ, 1873âÂÂ1915), Serbian painter
- Nadezhda Plevitskaya (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂûõòøÃÂúðÃÂ, 1884âÂÂ1940), Russian singer
- NaÃÂa Regin (NadeÃ
¾da Poderegin, 1931âÂÂ2019), Serbian singer
- Nadezhda Repina (ÃÂðôõöôð àõÿøýð, 1809âÂÂ1867), Russian actress and soprano
- Nadezhda Rumyantseva (ÃÂðôõöôð àÃÂüÃÂýÃÂõòð, 1930âÂÂ2008), Soviet and Russian actress
- Nadezhda Teffi (ÃÂðôõöôð âÃÂÃÂÃÂø, 1872âÂÂ1952), Russian humorist writer
- Nadezhda Udaltsova (ÃÂðôõöôð ãôðûÃÂÃÂþòð, 1886âÂÂ1961), Russian avant-garde artist
- Nadezhda Zabela-Vrubel (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂðñõûðâÂÂÃÂÃÂÃÂñõûÃÂ, 1868âÂÂ1913), Russian soprano
In the military
- Nadezhda Durova (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂÃÂÃÂþòð, 1783âÂÂ1866), woman who became a decorated soldier during the Napoleonic wars
- Nadezhda Popova (ÃÂðôõöôð ÃÂþÿþòð, 1921âÂÂ2013), squadron commander during World War II awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union
Fictional characters
- Nadezhda, original Russian name of Elizabeth Jennings on the TV series The Americans
- Nadezhda, on the TV series Dexter, who goes by the diminutive Nadia
- Nadia, on the TV series LOST, is Sayid's love interest
- Nadia, the main character on the Netflix TV series Russian Doll
See also