Lame is the English meaning of 'Claudia' and of 'Claudius'. The Latin 'Claudia' is a feminine proper name. The Latin 'Claudius' is the masculine form.
In Shakespeare's play Hamlet, Claudius is Hamlet's uncle and also his stepfather. There isn't a Claudia.
Claudia can be an English name, it doesn't need to be changed.
Claudia, Appius Claudius daugther who married Tiberius Graccus. Cristina Rizzi
Claudia is the same in English and Italian.Specifically, the noun is a feminine proper noun. It originates in Italy as the feminine equivalent of the ancient Latin masculine name Claudius. The original meaning remains uncertain even though it is suggested that the ultimate origin is in the masculine adjective claudus for "lame".The pronunciation will be "KLOW*-dya" in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Ow!"
By the time of Roman Emperor Claudius, Rome's population had been ever increasing. Claudius completed two aqueducts that the Emperor Caligula had begun before his untimely assassination.These were the aqueducts of Claudia and Novus.
its spelled claudia lol check on googletranslate.com
I can find no canonized saint by the name of Claudia. I imagine the name derived from Claud, Claudio, Claude or Claudius and there are a number of saints with those names.
Claudia Schiffer is German and speaks German fluently. She may also be able to speak English, as she has worked extensively in English-speaking countries.
Claudia Egerer has written: 'Fictions of (In) Betweenness (Gothenburg Studies in English , No 68)'
They were the emperors of the Julio-Claudian dynasty. They were members of the family of Augustus (the gens Julia or Julii, the Julians in English) and/or the family of Livia (the gens Claudia or Claudii, Claudians in English). They were Augustus (a Julian), Tiberius (a Claudian), Caligula, Claudius and Nero, who were all born into both the Julians and Claudians.
Claudia is the feminine form of the Roman name Claudius, held by two Roman families, one noble and the other plebeian. It is a royal epithet that means "limping" and dates from very elder days, when kings were ritually lamed as a mark of office.
The Roman name for Colchester was either Colonia Victorius (named after the invasion of Britian) or Colonia Claudia (in honour of emperor Claudius who led the invasion). On the current site of Colchester castle there used to be a temple to Claudius - suggesting that Roman Colchester could well have been named in his honour.