Cleopatra f
From Greek Kleopatra, the name (composed of the elements kleos glory + patēer father) borne by a large number of women in the Ptolemaic royal family of Egypt. The most famous (?69–30 BC) was the lover of Mark Antony, and has always figured largely in both literature and the popular imagination as a model of a passionate woman of unsurpassed beauty, who 'gave all for love' and in the process destroyed the man she loved. She had previously been the mistress of Julius Caesar. The name is occasionally chosen, especially in Black families.
First names dictionary. 2012.