Modern variant of Bellamy (Old French, beau ami, beautiful friend), adapted as a feminine given name.
Bellami is a softened, more feminine variant of Bellamy, a name with deep Norman French roots. The original bel ami translates simply as good friend or beautiful friend — a term of warm address in medieval French that eventually crystallized into a surname carried across the English Channel by Norman settlers in the 11th and 12th centuries. The name Bellamy was long primarily a surname in England and the United States before crossing into given-name use in the 20th century.
Literary culture gave Bellamy one of its most enduring associations: Edward Bellamy, the 19th-century American utopian novelist whose 1888 novel Looking Backward imagined a socialist America in the year 2000, made the name synonymous with visionary idealism. In more recent fiction, the character Bellamy Blake in the post-apocalyptic television series The 100 helped push the name toward younger audiences, associating it with moral complexity and leadership. Bellami, spelled with the Italian-style ending, arrived as parents began feminizing the name for daughters, drawn by its melodic quality and its meaning.
The -i ending softens what might otherwise feel like a surname and gives it a continental warmth — somewhere between Bellamy and Belinda. Today, Bellami sits in a field of names like Bellamy, Bellana, and Bellatrix, all trading on the Italian bella (beautiful) while carrying their own distinct histories. It is a name that manages to feel both aristocratic and approachable, old-world and entirely fresh.