Derived from the Sistine Chapel, named after Pope Sixtus; from Latin meaning 'sixth.'
Sistine is perhaps the only name in circulation that directly invokes one of humanity's supreme artistic achievements. The Cappella Sistina in Vatican City — the Sistine Chapel — takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV, who commissioned its construction between 1473 and 1481. Sixtus derives from the Latin Sextus, meaning 'sixth,' a common Roman birth-order name elevated by multiple popes into a title of papal authority.
Michelangelo's ceiling, painted between 1508 and 1512 at the commission of Pope Julius II, transformed the space into the most visited painted ceiling in the world — The Creation of Adam alone has become an icon reproduced on perhaps more surfaces than any other artwork in history. As a given name, Sistine leapt into public consciousness when Sylvester Stallone named his daughter Sistine Rose Stallone in 1998, a choice that signaled the name's potential as a vehicle for beauty, history, and grandeur simultaneously. She has since become a model and actress, carrying the name into a new generation of cultural visibility.
The name belongs to a small family of names derived from artistic landmarks — like Venetia or Siena — that function as invocations of beauty itself. Sistine is simultaneously audacious and classical — it announces that its bearer was named not after a person but after a place of transcendent human creation. There is something genuinely moving about that ambition: a child whose name is a prayer to artistic excellence and the enduring power of paint on plaster.