Proper noun
Dorothea
A female given name from Ancient Greek, a Latinate variant of Dorothy.
Among these were his 1516 studies of Jakob and Dorothea Meyer, sketched, like many of his father's portrait drawings, in silverpoint and chalk. Source: Internet
Bätschmann & Griener, 63. Holbein also painted the occasional portrait in Basel, among them the double portrait of Jakob and Dorothea Meyer, and, in 1519, that of the young academic Boniface Amerbach. Source: Internet
Annotated edition in four volumes with supplementary fifth volume, published by Manfred Engel, Ulrich Fülleborn, Dorothea Lauterbach, Horst Nalewski and August Stahl. Source: Internet
Artists such as Dorothea Lange were aided by having salaried work during the Depression. citation She captured what have become classic images of the dust storms and migrant families. Source: Internet
Bracelin 1960, pp. 125–133 Heselton 2012a, pp. 104–109 The very same evening (28 July 1927) after Gardner had met this medium, he met the woman he was to marry; Dorothea Frances Rosedale, known as Donna, a relation of his sister-in-law Edith. Source: Internet
Another group of cloistered "Nuns of St Ambrose", also called the Annunciatae (Italian: Annunziate) of Lombardy or "Sisters of St Marcellina", were founded in 1408 by three young women of Pavia, Dorothea Morosini, Eleonora Contarini, and Veronica Duodi. Source: Internet