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Clarice

From Latin 'clarus' meaning bright or clear. Medieval French form popularized by Saint Clare.

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1900s1950s1990s
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2 syllables
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Name story

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.

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