Sophya is a spelling variant of Sophia, from Greek sophia, meaning wisdom.
Sophya is a thoughtfully respelled form of Sophia, one of the great names of the ancient world. Its source, the Greek *sophía*, means "wisdom" — not merely intellectual knowledge but the deeper, embodied understanding that the ancient Greeks considered the highest human virtue. Philosophy itself is literally "love of wisdom" (*philo* + *sophia*), and the concept was so central to Greek civilization that it became a goddess, a theological principle, and eventually a name.
In early Christian theology, *Sophia* was venerated as a divine attribute — the wisdom of God — and several martyrs named Sophia were canonized as saints, most notably a third-century Roman martyr whose daughters were named Faith, Hope, and Charity. The name spread through Byzantium and the Orthodox world, where it named the greatest cathedral in Christendom: the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, built by Justinian in 537 CE. In Western Europe, Sophia gained royal prestige through the Hanoverian succession: Sophia of Hanover (1630–1714) was the grandmother of Britain's King George I, anchoring the Protestant line.
The *-ya* variant Sophya introduces a soft, Slavic cadence found across Eastern Europe, where forms like *Sofiya* and *Sofya* have long been standard. This spelling gives the name an international dimension — legible to English speakers but carrying an unmistakable hint of somewhere else, somewhere older. It is a name that has never truly gone out of fashion and never quite loses its association with intelligence and grace.