From Latin 'clarus' meaning bright or clear. Medieval French form popularized by Saint Clare.
Clarice is an elegant medieval elaboration of Clara, from the Latin 'clarus,' meaning 'bright,' 'clear,' 'famous,' or 'illustrious.' The name entered the Romance-language world through the veneration of Saint Clare of Assisi (1194–1253), the founder of the Order of Poor Ladies and a close companion of Saint Francis. In Italian, the elaborated form Chiaricia or Claricia gave rise to Clarice, which spread through medieval Europe as a name associated with both saintly virtue and luminous intelligence.
It appears in Dante's Florence — Clarice Orsini was the wife of Lorenzo de' Medici — and in literary texts throughout the Renaissance. In English literary history, Clarice has a distinguished presence. Samuel Richardson's monumental 1748 epistolary novel Clarissa (a close variant) centered on a heroine of towering moral seriousness, and the family of Clarice names benefited from that cultural prestige.
The name flowed steadily through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as a refined but not ostentatious choice. Then, in 1991, Clarice received its most famous modern bearer: Clarice Starling, the steely FBI trainee protagonist of Thomas Harris's The Silence of the Lambs and Jonathan Demme's film adaptation. Jodie Foster's Oscar-winning portrayal cemented the name's association with intelligence, courage, and a certain uncanny composure under pressure.
Today Clarice sits at a fascinating intersection. It is old enough to feel genuinely classical, rare enough to feel distinctive, and bound — for the foreseeable future — to carry Starling's shadow. For parents who see that association as an asset rather than a burden, Clarice offers something rare: a name with ancient roots, a saint's blessing, a Renaissance pedigree, and one of contemporary fiction's most compelling heroines.