Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Maurice

Meaning — Maurice is a French masculine given name derived from the Latin Mauritius — itself from Maurus meaning "dark-skinned" or "from Mauretania" (North Africa). Saint Maurice, the Roman soldier and Christian martyr executed near the Rhône in 286 AD, became patron of numerous French cities and gave the name its medieval prestige. Maurice is a classic French name, borne by the composer Maurice Ravel and the philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty.·French origin·Male·mo-REES

Maurice Maurice carries the solid, cultivated dignity of a classic French masculine name associated with artistic achievement and intellectual seriousness — Ravel's musical precision, Merleau-Ponty's phenomenological depth. In French fiction, characters named Maurice often project a quiet authority and genuine depth of character suited to stories of provincial France, the intellectual traditions of Paris, and the cultural life of 20th-century France.

Best genres for Maurice

Historical FictionLiterary FictionContemporary FictionRomance

Famous characters named Maurice

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

MauriceMaurizioMauricioMauro

Pairs well with

Maurice MoreauMaurice DupontMaurice RenardMaurice BernardMaurice LeclercMaurice Fontaine

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Sabine is a French feminine given name from the Latin Sabina, meaning "Sabine woman" — referring to the Sabine people of central Italy, one of Rome's oldest neighboring peoples. The Sabine women became famous through the legend of the Rape of the Sabine Women, when Rome's founders abducted Sabine women to populate the new city. Several early Christian martyrs named Sabina gave the name ecclesiastical prestige in France and Italy.

Lucy

Lucy is an Anglicized form of Lucia, from the Latin Lux meaning "light". Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia, died c. 304), the Syracusan martyr whose eyes were gouged out yet remained miraculously sighted, is one of the most venerated saints in Italy and Scandinavia. In Italian-French contexts, Lucy represents the international form of Lucia, used in communities with English-speaking connections alongside the native Lucia or Lucie.

Alexia

Alexia is a feminine given name, the feminine form of Alexis, from the Greek alexein meaning "to defend, to help". It is a variant of Alexandra filtered through the shorter Alexis form. In France and the Iberian Peninsula, Alexia became a popular feminine name in the late 20th century, combining the prestige of its Greek roots with a modern, internationalist feel.

Sophie

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Luc

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Claire

Claire is a French feminine given name from the Latin clara meaning "clear, bright, famous". Saint Clare of Assisi (1194–1253), co-founder with Saint Francis of the Poor Clares religious order, gave the name immense prestige in the Catholic world — her name chosen to match her luminous spiritual beauty. In France, Claire has been one of the most enduringly beloved feminine names, combining religious prestige with everyday elegance.


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