From Latin 'vita' meaning life, used as a virtue name celebrating vitality.
Vita is Latin for "life" in its most direct and unadorned form — a name that is essentially a declaration. It appears in early Christian inscriptions and was used in medieval Europe both as a given name and as a component of longer names (Donata Vita, meaning "life given as a gift"). The name carries the theological resonance of "vita aeterna," eternal life, making it a natural choice in Catholic naming traditions from Italy to Spain to Latin America, where it occasionally appears as a short form of Victoria or Davita.
No bearer shaped the English-speaking perception of Vita more indelibly than Vita Sackville-West, the British poet, novelist, and legendary gardener who created the gardens at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent and maintained one of the 20th century's most celebrated literary friendships — and love affairs — with Virginia Woolf. Woolf's novel "Orlando" was written for her and addressed to her; Vita was its muse, its subject, its dedicatee. She was eccentric, aristocratic, prolific, and unapologetically herself.
Her name, so simply meaning "life," became synonymous with a particular vision of creative vitality and unconventional living. Today Vita is experiencing a gentle revival, drawn by parents who appreciate its brevity, its Latin elegance, and its connection to both Sackville-West's legacy and the natural world — vita as in "aqua vitae," as in the very animating force of existence. It is a name impossible to misunderstand.