embrisa.
embrisa.
Theme
Masculine

Marco

/ˈmɑːr.koʊ/

Of Mars, warlike

How to say it

MAR · co

/ˈmɑːr.koʊ/

What it means

The Italian form of Mark and Marcus, from Mars, the Roman god of war.

Marco is the Italian form of Mark and Marcus, tracing back to Mars, the god of war. Its most famous bearer is Marco Polo, the Venetian merchant whose travels opened Europe's eyes to Asia, and whose name still echoes in the pool game. It is a cornerstone name across Italy and Latin America and a cousin of Mark, Marcus, and Marcos. Crisp and warm.

Popularity over time

#10 #100 #1000 #1 #175918802025

peaked at #174 in 1996, currently #370 in 2025.

Source: U.S. Social Security Administration, names given to at least 5 babies in a year, 1880–present. See where the names are moving

Heads-up notes

  • Pop culture

    Marco Polo, the Venetian traveler, is the headline bearer.

  • Spelling

    The Italian form of Mark; Marcos is the Spanish, Marcus the Latin.

Who's worn it

Historical figures, characters, and public faces who share the name. The cultural surface, for whatever weight you want to give it.

  • Marco Polo 13th-century Venetian merchant and traveler to Asia

Spelling variants

  • Marcos
  • Marc
  • Marko