Viktoriya
| Gender | female |
|---|---|
| Origin | |
| Derivation | Latin victoria |
| Meaning | "victory" |
| Region of origin | Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Bulgaria |
| Other names | |
| Related names | Victoria, Viktorija, Vittoria, Wiktoria, Victoire, Victor |
Viktoriya (Russian: Виктория; Ukrainian: Вікторія) is an feminine given name, a variant of the name Victoria in several Slavic languages. It is derived from the Latin word victoria, meaning "victory".[1]
Notable people with the name
- Viktoriya Amelina (1986−2023), Ukrainian activist and writer
- Viktoriya Beloslydtseva (born 1972), Kazakhstani athlete
- Viktoriya Fyodorova (born 1973), Russian high jumper
- Viktoriya Gurova (born 1982), Russian triple jumper
- Viktoriya Klimina (born 1976), Russian long-distance runner
- Viktoriya Klyugina (born 1980), Russian high jumper
- Viktoriya Koval (born 1985), Ukrainian archer
- Viktoriya Kravchenko, Ukrainian Paralympic
- Viktoriya Kutuzova (born 1988), Ukrainian tennis player
- Viktoriya Lyan (born 1997), Kazakhstani archer
- Viktoriya Mitina, Russian politician
- Viktoriya Nikiforova (born 2010), Uzbek rhythmic gymnast
- Viktoriya Prokopenko (born 1989), Russian triple jumper
- Viktoriya Rybalko (born 1982), Ukrainian long jumper
- Viktoriya Styopina (born 1976), Ukrainian high jumper
- Viktoriya Tokareva (born 1937), Russian screenwriter and short story writer
- Viktoriya Tokonbayeva (born 1975), Kazakhstani sprinter
- Viktoriya Tolstoganova (born 1972), Russian film and theater actress
- Viktoriya Tomova (born 1995), Bulgarian professional tennis player
- Viktoriya Troytskaya (born 1969), Russian short track speed skater
- Viktoriya Vershynina (born 1971), Ukrainian long jumper
- Viktoriya Yermolyeva (born 1978), Ukrainian pianist
- Viktoriya Zeynep Güneş (born 1998), Ukrainian and Turkish swimmer
See also
- Viktoria (disambiguation)
- Viktorija (disambiguation)
- Victoria (name)
- All pages with titles containing Viktoriya