Variant of Fiona, from Gaelic 'fionn' meaning 'fair' or 'white.'
Viona is a rare feminine name that moves in the orbit of several better-known names without being fully claimed by any of them. It is most naturally read as a variant of Fiona, the Scottish Gaelic name meaning "white, fair, pure" — from the Celtic root fionn, the same element that gives us Finn, Finbar, and Fingal. Scottish poet James Macpherson popularized Fiona in his 18th-century Ossian poems, and the name spread widely from there.
Viona shifts the opening consonant to create a softer, more overtly melodic name — the V giving it a continental, almost Romance-language warmth absent from the harder F of Fiona. The name also resonates with Viola, the Latin name for the violet flower and one of Shakespeare's most beloved heroines in Twelfth Night — a character defined by wit, disguise, and emotional intelligence. Viona captures some of Viola's musical quality (both names share the -io- vowel sequence central to the Italian word for violin, violino) while being distinctly its own entity.
In some families it appears to have been coined independently as a feminine elaboration of surnames or as a melodic invention, which gives individual bearers the sense of carrying something uniquely theirs. Today Viona remains genuinely unusual — a name that prompts curiosity without confusion, that people find beautiful when they hear it but rarely anticipate. It has the texture of a name discovered rather than assigned, and for parents who love Fiona or Viola but want something less traveled, it occupies a luminous middle ground: unmistakably feminine, unmistakably uncommon, carrying deep Celtic and classical harmonics in a form that feels entirely fresh.