Traci is a modern spelling of Tracy, from a French place-name and surname meaning "of Thracius's domain."
Traci is a mid-century American feminine spelling of Tracy, a name with surprisingly deep roots. Tracy derives from the Norman French place name Tracy-Bocage in Calvados, Normandy, which itself comes from the Gallo-Roman personal name Thracius — a man from Thrace, the ancient region spanning modern Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey. The name arrived in Ireland with the Anglo-Norman invasion, where it blended with and occasionally displaced the Gaelic clan name Ó Treasaigh.
For much of its early history, Tracy functioned as a masculine surname — Spencer Tracy, the Hollywood icon, is the most enduring example. The decisive feminisation happened in mid-twentieth-century America, when a wave of surname-to-given-name transfers reshaped the naming landscape. The spelling Traci, with its fashionable terminal 'i', was a hallmark of the 1960s and 70s, a period when creative respellings signalled individuality within popular trends.
Traci peaked in American usage around 1970 and appears frequently in the cultural record of that era — in pop songs, television credits, and the yearbooks of a generation. Though less common for newborns today, the name retains a warmth associated with that confident, sun-drenched decade. Its journey from a Thracian province to a Norman hamlet to Irish clan rolls to American pop culture is a reminder of how far a single name can travel across time and geography.