Variant of Keziah, the Hebrew biblical name meaning 'cassia', a fragrant spice; borne by one of Job's daughters in the Old Testament.
Kitsia is a variant of Keziah, the Hebrew biblical name meaning cassia, a fragrant spice, and borne by one of Job’s daughters in the Old Testament. That gives the name both botanical and scriptural associations, a combination that has long made biblical plant names feel vivid and graceful.
Kitsia keeps the fragrance and heritage of Keziah while changing the sound into something rarer and more stylized. The name has a delicate, slightly exotic texture, partly because of its unusual spelling and partly because it still hints at the spice imagery of the source. It feels feminine, refined, and uncommon, with a warmth that comes from both nature and scripture.
As a modern variant, Kitsia sounds less formal than Keziah but still carries the same ancient resonance. It is the kind of name that feels quietly distinctive, rooted in biblical history yet softened by an inventive contemporary form.