Katina emerges from the ancient Greek Aikaterine—“pure” by etymology—yet in its unfolding journey it gathers the sun-drenched warmth of Latin culture into each syllable. It drifts like a silken veil over whitewashed courtyards, stirring visions of wrought-iron balconies heavy with bougainvillea and the distant echo of guitar strings calling the dusk to dance. In the early 1970s, District of Columbia families bestowed Katina upon fifty-two newborns in 1972, a number that gracefully tapered to thirty-four in 1973, seven in 1974 and five in 1975, each child carrying forward its gentle promise. From marble-lined temples of antiquity to the bustling streets of modern cities, Katina weaves a narrative of timeless purity streaked with the passionate heartbeat of Mediterranean and Latin fêtes—inviting every bearer into a story both luminous and alive with vibrant spirit.
| Katina Strauch - | 
| Katina Paxinou - |