📖 À propos Lidia
Lidia est la forme espagnole, italienne et polonaise de Lydia, nommée d'après l'antique royaume de Lydie en Asie Mineure occidentale — la civilisation à qui l'on attribue l'invention des pièces de monnaie vers le VIIe siècle av. J.-C. Dans le Nouveau Testament, Lydie de Thyatire était une marchande de tissu pourpre qui devint l'une des premières Européennes baptisées par Paul, conférant au prénom une résonance à la fois commerciale et spirituelle. Longtemps utilisé dans l'Europe catholique, Lidia a été porté par des personnalités extraordinaires, dont la légende du patinage de vitesse Lidia Skoblikova (six médailles d'or olympiques), la cheffe Lidia Bastianich, la romancière portugaise Lídia Jorge et la star de la pop mexicaine Lidia Ávila.
📍 Détails
- OrigineGreek
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationVariant of Lydia. Woman from Lydia
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Lidia Bastianich — Italian-American chef, restaurateur, cookbook author, and television host (born 1947), one of the most celebrated Italian-American culinary figures, known for her television series "Lidia's Kitchen" and her award-winning New York restaurants.
- Lidia Skoblikova — Soviet speed skater (born 1939), the most decorated Winter Olympian of the 20th century with six Olympic gold medals (1960 and 1964 Games), and the first athlete to win four gold medals at a single Winter Olympics.
- Lídia Jorge — Portuguese novelist (born 1946), one of the most important writers in contemporary Portuguese literature, internationally acclaimed for "The Murmuring Coast" and a prominent voice in post-colonial and feminist Portuguese fiction.
- Lydia of Thyatira — Early Christian figure mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles (1st century AD), a prosperous merchant of purple cloth in Philippi who became one of the first Europeans baptized by the Apostle Paul and hosted the first Christian community in Europe.
- Lidia Avalos (Lidia Ávila) — Mexican singer (born 1975), a founding member of the immensely popular Latin pop group OV7, one of the best-selling and most beloved pop acts in Mexican music history.