Italian word name meaning 'flower,' from Latin 'flos'; used for both genders in Italy.
Fiore is the Italian word for "flower," drawn directly from the Latin *flos*, *floris*, and it functions both as a given name and as one of the most evocative vocabulary words in the Italian language. The name carries within it the entire Latin tradition of floral naming — the *floralia* festivals of ancient Rome, the goddess Flora herself, and the medieval Christian symbolism that saw flowers as emblems of divine beauty and the soul's flourishing. To name a child Fiore is to invoke an entire poetic tradition in a single syllable.
In Italy, Fiore has been used as both a masculine and feminine given name since the medieval period, with a particular prevalence in southern Italy and Sicily. It appears in hagiographic tradition — several saints bore floral names — and in the naming customs of Italian peasant communities where nature names carried a practical poetry. The name also has a notable place in medieval Italian literary culture: Fiore di Virtù was a widely read 14th-century moral anthology, and *Il Fiore* is a fragmentary Italian poem sometimes attributed to Dante Alighieri, an adaptation of the *Roman de la Rose*.
Whether or not Dante wrote it, the association links Fiore to the very highest of medieval literary ambition. In contemporary usage, Fiore is rare outside Italy and Italian-American communities, which gives it an appealingly distinctive character for parents seeking something beautiful and pronounceable that carries genuine cultural depth. It shares the current fashion for nature-derived names — Lily, Rose, Iris, Flora — while being rare enough to feel genuinely individual. Short, complete, and luminous, Fiore is a name that requires no translation to communicate its essence.