baby name ClementineThe baby name Clementine drips with vintage charm.

Thanks to Elisabeth and Zoe for suggesting today’s Baby Name of the Day.

ANCIENT

In the early days of Christianity, several early church leaders took the name Clement, including Pope St. Clement I. It may be derived from a family name – St. Clement of Alexandria, for example, was born Titus Flavius Clemens.

Clement comes from the Latin for mild or gentle.

Early feminine forms ranged from Clementia to Clemencia to Clemence. All of the Clem- names fell out of of favor during the Reformation, but Clement made a comeback in the nineteenth century. The baby name Clementine emerged as the preferred English feminine form around the same time.

REGAL CLEMENTINE

The nineteenth century gives us two princesses by the name.

First was Princess Clementine of Orleans, born to Louis-Phillipe, King of the French, in 1817.

Then there’s Princess Clementine of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, born in 1872. Clementine married Prince Victor Napoleon in 1910. Had history turned out differently, she might have become Empress of France. The romance between the princess and the pretender to the throne was widely reported.

Aristocratic Clementines follow, but the name hasn’t been used much in royal circles in more recent years.

OH MY DARLING

In the 1880s, in the American West, Percy Montrose penned the lyrics to Oh My Darling, Clementine, a mournful ballad about a lovely girl who meets a sorry fate. Odds are you know the refrain; it’s been a staple ever since.

It’s not the last time Clementine would feature in a song title. Bobby Darin recorded “Clementine” in 1960. It’s awfully mean-spirited by today’s standards. But then there’s Halsey’s quirky and fierce “Clementine” from 2019 … but we’ll come back to that song.

What we know is this: in 1880, the first year for which Social Security data are available, the baby name Clementine ranked in the Top 400 most popular names for girls born in the US – not Mary, but more popular than Ava or Abigail by 1880 standards.

Plenty of influences led to Montrose’s song. Maybe one of those includes the reason for the name, or maybe it was simply a reasonable choice for the era.

EDIBLE CLEMENTINE

All of this – the popes, the princesses, the “Oh my Darling” lyrics – predate a familiar use of Clementine.

That would be the citrus fruit.

After all, we’re still talking about Gwyneth Paltrow’s decision to name her daughter Apple.

In 1902, Brother Clement Rodier discovered a hybrid fruit growing the gardens of his orphanage in Algeria, then a French colony. The new fruit was part sweet orange, part mandarin.

Rodier dubbed the new fruit a clementine, and a few years later they made their way to the US.

While the name’s status as a snack might detract for some, it’s worth noting that we routinely name our children Olive and Sage, too.

LADY CHURCHILL

Clementine Churchill, wife to British prime minister Winston, was born well before the citrus fruit became widely known, in 1885.

Born to an aristocratic family, Clementine Ogilvy Hozier married Winston in 1908. She was known for her leadership in the Red Cross and YWCA during the wars, and as a steadfast and loyal partner to her husband.

She’s also the best-known Clementine of the twentieth century.

ETERNAL SUNSHINE

By the 1950s, this name had exited the US Top 1000.

From the 1960s into the early 2000s, the name hovered on the edge of extinction.

So what changed?

Kate Winslet played Clementine in 2004’s Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

The sci fi romance was lauded by critics, and earned Winslet a Best Actress Oscar nomination. It’s often mentioned on best-of lists, and cited by the others as influential. Halsey’s song “Clementine” is a nod to Kate Winslet’s character.

No surprise there’s a tiny bump in the name’s use, from 19 births in 2003 to 59 by 2005.

RISING FAVORITE

Celebrities embraced the baby name Clementine in the following years. Claudia Schiffer was among the first; Ethan Hawke also welcomed a daughter by the name in the years after the movie’s release.

By 2014, the name had returned to the US Top 1000. It ranked #685 as of the 2018.

And why not? Clementine remains ripe for revival – sweet and slightly old-fashioned, worn by princesses and historical figures, with a great meaning, too. The baby name Clementine boasts a ready-made lullaby and color palette. It’s a name with depth, character, and charm.

Would you consider Clementine for a daughter?

Originally published on May 19, 2008, this post was revised on March 11, 2013 and again on June 17, 2020.

Image by Jill Wellington from Pixabay

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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57 Comments

  1. My daughter is named Clementine Elizabeth. Everyone pronounces it the American way, like the fruit. I call her Clementina. She has so many nicknames. It is a unique name for a unique little girl. I fell in love with the name before I knew I was having children. I just so happened to get my girl. My husband’s family hated the name, he and they didn’t have a say. Now they love it. I’ve never heard of Cleo and Minnie as nicknames for Clementine. Family calls her Tiny, Clem, Bummers and Sunshine. I don’t think, at all, that it has a hipster vibe to it. It is a classic, unique name that isn’t usually picked because it takes some balls to name your child such a weighted name.

  2. My daughter born in July 2012 is Clémentine Nico.
    We’re french speakers so we pronounce it, à la française : Clé-men-teen and her nickname is Clem. She’s been call Clemen-TYNE in the US (I hate this pronounciation it’s so harsh, brrr) and Clemen-TINA in Mexico (quite cute, it’s closer to the french pronounciation)
    It was my great-grandmother’s name and I’ve being in love with the name since I heard it years ago when I was a little girl : )
    We will be trying for another baby during the next year, if it’s a girl she’ll probably be Saskia and we quite like Lucien or Owen for a boy, we think they ”fit” well with Clémentine! : )

  3. Ditto ‘M’ above — I highly dislike the sound of Clementine. I remember learning the song at school in the second grade, complete with horribly exaggerated Southern accents [we didn’t have actual Southern accents ourselves]. All I think of when I hear/see the name is unwashed, barefoot, hick children hollering after each other in a dirt patch. :-/

  4. I’ve always liked Clementine. I love the song, and there’s a movie based on the song you know, an old black and white western. I remember it because there’s an episode of MASH where they are watching Oh My Darling Clementine. The song is rather silly and pokes fun at Clementine but the movie is a more romantic/tragic take on the song.

    I like either pronunciation, but I say it rhyming with ‘line’. I don’t know that I like it enough more than other names to use it though. I do love the virtue quality, but I actually like Mercy as a name more. I think this name could rise quite a bit in popularity. I wouldn’t be surprised if it makes it onto the top 1000 finally. Someone mentioned Eliza Clementine, but I think I would like Ella Clementine more. Maybe Lila Clementine? Another possible nickname would be Cutie (there’s a brand of clementines called this). I like just Clem or Clemmy though (as well as some of the other suggestions.

  5. Princess Clementine wasn’t just a Princess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, but also the daughter of the King of Belgium!

  6. I wanted to add a nickname for Clementine. My great aunt was named Clementine and was alsways called Nine-Nine. I’m not sure why she was called this but I love it!

  7. I have a three year old named Clementine Skye and it suits her perfectly! She is funny and sweet and strong-willed. We call her Clem, Clemmie or sometimes Clemmers. Everyone we meet loves her name and on more than one occasion someone has said “I really wanted to name my daughter Clementine but my husband/wife wasn’t sold on it”…Our Clemmie was almost an Ava, another beautiful name but it really wasn’t strong enough to carry our little ladies personality!