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What’s In a Name: Elizabeth

The Best Name a Queen (or a Mere Girl) Can Have

Elizabeth Sobieski
2 min readSep 8, 2022
Queen Elizabeth II, 2015, Joel Rouse/Ministry of Defense, Her Majesty the Queen during her visit to HMS Ocean in Devonport, Open Government License 3.0, Wikimedia Commons

The world will miss the extraordinary and beloved Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth of Nations. I was always proud to share her name.

I don’t know how I came to be given the handsome nomenclature of Elizabeth. It is a Hebrew name meaning “Consecrated to God.”

My now deceased mother told me that my father wished to name me Rebecca and she had insisted upon Leslie, and they couldn’t agree.

Did they inadvertently or deliberately name me after the queen? Or perhaps Elizabeth Taylor? Or did they just like the name? It was popular long before the twentieth-century births of both notable Elizabeths.

I am proud to perhaps be named for (arguably) the two greatest monarchs the world has ever known, Elizabeth I and II. (Or the ultimate movie queen).

I wish I were as impeccable, disciplined and as dutiful a human being as the late queen, who passed today, on September 8, and who served her people for more than 25,000 days.

Along with the name, we did share the commonality of being hat heads. Like Queen Elizabeth, I am rarely spotted outdoors without flamboyant millinery.

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Elizabeth Sobieski
Elizabeth Sobieski

Written by Elizabeth Sobieski

Elizabeth Sobieski @TheMaskedHatter on Instagram, has written for various publications and is the author of “The Masked Hatter-Pandemic Style," Penser Press.

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