Feminine of Joaquín, from Hebrew Yehoiakim meaning God will establish.
Joaquina is the Spanish and Portuguese feminine form of Joaquín, which derives from the Hebrew Yehoyakim — meaning "God will establish" or "Yahweh raises up." The masculine Joachim appears in Catholic and Orthodox tradition as the name of the father of the Virgin Mary, a figure absent from canonical scripture but central to the apocryphal Gospel of James. That Marian connection gave all variants of the name a devotional warmth, particularly in the Iberian world and Latin America.
The name's most significant bearer is Saint Joaquina de Vedruna (1783–1854), a Catalan mystic, mother of nine, and founder of the Carmelite Sisters of Charity, who was canonized in 1959. Her life — marked by the Napoleonic Wars, the death of her husband, and decades of religious work — made her an emblem of resilient faith, and her name spread across Catholic communities in Spain and the Americas as a devotional choice. The name also appears in 19th-century Brazilian and Portuguese aristocratic records, carried by noblewomen and, later, by the daughter of King João VI of Portugal.
Joaquina carries the full melodic weight of Iberian naming tradition — four syllables that move through the mouth like a small song, ending in the soft -ina diminutive that softens without diminishing. In English-speaking contexts it reads as boldly international, a name that announces cultural heritage without apology and rewards those willing to pronounce it properly.