Hunric is an Anglo-Saxon masculine name composed of Hun (Hun) and ric (king), cognate with Vandalic Huneric.
Hunric [Herbert Grueber 1893 A Catalogue of English Coins in the British Museum, Anglo-Saxon Series 2: 102].
Hunrice [Christopher Blunt 1974 The British Numismatic Journal 42: 107].
Hūnrīc [Keith Briggs 2021 An index to personal names in English place-names, 1st edition, page 173].
Hun = One of an Asiatic race of warlike nomads, who invaded Europe c ᴀ.ᴅ. 375, and in the middle of the 5th c., under their famous king Attila (styled Flagellum Dei, the scourge of God), overran and ravaged a great part of this continent [Sir James Murray 1901 A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles, 1st edition, 5: 455].
-ric = king [Kathrin McCann 2018 Anglo-Saxon Kingship and Political Power, page 77].
Hunric was the name of a moneyer working under King Æthelstan II: ✠HVNRICE MON [Rory Naismith & Francesca Tinti 2016 Bollettino di Numismatica, new series, (55-56 The Forum Hoard of Anglo-Saxon Coins): 220, number 592]. This coin is from a hoard that was found in the House of the Vestal Virgins on 8 November 1883: “there can be little doubt that it represents a payment of Peter’s pence to the Holy See lost in the troubled wars between Alberic, Prince of the Romans, and Ugo, King of Italy, in which the Pope took the side of the former” [Christopher Blunt 1974 The British Numismatic Journal 42: 141].