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===Non-Byzantine royals===
===Non-Byzantine royals===
* [[Eudoxia of Moscow]] or of Suzdal (Yevdokia) (d. 1407), Grand Duchess of the [[Grand Duchy of Moscow]], wife of [[Dmitry Donskoy]]
* [[Eudoxia of Moscow]] or of Suzdal (Yevdokia) (d. 1407), Grand Duchess of the [[Grand Duchy of Moscow]], wife of [[Dmitry Donskoy]]
* [[Eudoxia Lopukhina]] (1669-1731), first wife of [[Peter the Great]]
* [[Eudoxia Lopukhina]] (1669–1731), first wife of [[Peter the Great]]
* [[Maria Eutokia Toaputeitou]] (died 1869), queen of the Polynesian island of [[Mangareva]], wife of Maputeoa, mother of Joseph Gregorio II
* [[Maria Eutokia Toaputeitou]] (d. 1869), queen of the Polynesian island of [[Mangareva]], wife of Maputeoa, mother of Joseph Gregorio II


===Fiction===
===Fiction===
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*'''Eudoxius''' can refer to (cronologically):
*'''Eudoxius''' can refer to (cronologically):
**[[St. Eudoxius of Armenia]], 2nd-century Roman soldier and Christian martyr from the time of Emperor Trajan
**[[St. Eudoxius of Armenia]], 2nd-century Roman soldier and Christian martyr from the time of Emperor Trajan
**[[September 6 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)|Holy Martyrs Eudoxius, Zeno, Macarius, and Companions]] (martyred 311-312); relevant here: [[St. Eudoxius of Melitene]]
**[[September 6 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)|Holy Martyrs Eudoxius, Zeno, Macarius, and Companions]] (martyred 311–312); relevant here: [[St. Eudoxius of Melitene]]
**[[St. Eudoxius of Sebaste]], Christian martyr from the time of Emperor Licinius, martyred in 315 at Sebaste together with other Roman Christian soldiers - see [[Agapius, Atticus, Carterius, Styriacus, Tobias, Eudoxius, Nictopolion, and Companions]]
**[[St. Eudoxius of Sebaste]], Christian martyr from the time of Emperor Licinius, martyred in 315 at Sebaste together with other Roman Christian soldiers - see [[Agapius, Atticus, Carterius, Styriacus, Tobias, Eudoxius, Nictopolion, and Companions]]
**[[Eudoxius of Antioch]] (died 370), Arian bishop of Antioch and later of Constantinople
**[[Eudoxius of Antioch]] (died 370), Arian bishop of Antioch and later of Constantinople

Revision as of 03:02, 29 October 2018

Eudoxia (Greek: Ευδοξία, Eudoxía), Eudokia (Ευδοκία, Eudokía, anglicized as Eudocia) or Evdokia is a feminine given name, which originally meant "good deeds" or "she whose deeds are good" in Greek. The Slavic forms of the name are East Slavic: Evdokiya (Russian: Евдокия), Yevdokiya (Ukrainian: Євдокія); South Slavic: Evdokija (Евдокија), Jevdokija (Јевдокија). It was mainly popular in late antiquity and during the Middle Ages, particularly in Eastern Europe. It continues in use today, usually in honor of various saints.[citation needed]

For Russians named Avdotia look there.

Eudoxia, Eudokia and Eudocia

The names Eudoxia, Eudokia, and Eudocia are interchangeable in most cases for the Wikipedia search engine.

Saints

Byzantine royals

Non-Byzantine royals

Fiction

  • Eudoxia, a fictional character in the Anne Rice novel Blood and Gold
  • Eudoxia, One of Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities
  • Eudoxia, one of the colony worlds in The Expanse (Babylon’s Ashes).

Evdokia

Evdokia, one variant of the Greek name, can stand for:

Slavic variants of the Greek name

  • Avdotya, Avdotia - Russian variant of the Greek name
  • Evdokija - Serbian variant of the Greek name
  • Evdokiya - Russian and Bulgarian variant of the Greek name

Places

Ships

See also

Eudoxus and Eudoxius are male versions of the name.