Carlota (name)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carlota is a Catalan, German, Portuguese, Spanish, and Swedish feminine given name that is an alternate form of Charlotte and a feminine form of Charlot and Carl.[1] Notable people known by this name include the following:

Given name[]

  • Carlota of Mexico, Princess Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine of Belgium (1840–1927)
  • Carlota Alfaro (born 1933), Puerto Rican fashion designer
  • Carlota Castrejana (born 1973), triple jumper from Spain
  • Carlota Ciganda (born 1990), professional golfer from Spain
  • Carlota De Camargo Nascimento (Loty) (1904–1974), Brazilian sculptor and poet
  • Carlota de Godoy y Borbón, 2nd Duchess of Sueca, Spanish noble
  • Carlota Pereira de Queirós (1892–1982), Brazilian feminist and politician
  • Carlota Escutia Dotti, Spanish geologist
  • Carlota D. EspinoZa (born 1943), American painter
  • Carlota Ferreira (1838 – c. 1912), Uruguayan woman
  • Carlota Garrido de la Peña (1870-1958), Argentine journalist, writer, teacher
  • Carlota Gooden (born 1936), Panamanian sprinter
  • Carlota Jaramillo, stage name of María Isabel Carlota Jaramillo, (1904–1987), Ecuadorian singer
  • Carlotta Minna Labowsky, known as Lotte Labowsky (1905–1991), Jewish German classicist
  • Carlota Joaquina of Spain, Carlota Joaquina Teresa Caetana, Queen consort of Portugal (1775, 1830)
  • Carlota Lozano (born 1945), Panamanian beauty queen
  • Carlota Lucumí, Carlota (rebel leader) (died 1844), African-born enslaved Cuban woman of Yoruba origin
  • Carlota Matienzo (1881–1926), Puerto Rican teacher and feminist
  • Carlota O'Neill (1905–2000), Spanish feminist writer and journalist
  • Carlota Perez (born 1939), Venezuelan economist
  • Carlota Petchamé (born 1990), field hockey player
  • Carlota S. Smith (1934–2007), American linguist
  • Carlota Sosa (born 1957), Spanish-born Venezuelan actress
  • Carlota Ulloa (born 1944), Chilean hurdling athlete

Middle name[]

  • Princess Maria Luisa Carlota of Parma (1802–1857), Princess of Parma and member of the House of Bourbon

Fictional[]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Carlota". Name-doctor.com. Retrieved January 23, 2020.
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