A modern form of Azariah, meaning 'Yahweh has helped,' with a gentler ending spell.
Azarie is a French-inflected variant of Azariah (עֲזַרְיָה), a Hebrew name meaning 'God has helped' or 'helped by Yahweh,' from the roots *azar* (to help) and *Yah* (a short form of the divine name). Azariah appears multiple times in the Hebrew Bible — it was the birth name of Abednego, one of the three companions of Daniel thrown into the fiery furnace by Nebuchadnezzar and miraculously preserved. It was also the name of a High Priest of Israel, a reforming king of Judah (also called Uzziah), and numerous other figures in the biblical narrative, making it one of the more common names in the Hebrew scriptures.
In post-biblical tradition, the name entered Christian and Jewish communities across Europe and the Mediterranean. The French suffix *-ie* replacing the *-iah* transforms the ancient Hebrew name into something that sounds at home in the same register as Zacharie, Nathanaëlie, or Sophonie — a Gallicized biblical name with both theological depth and continental elegance. This adaptation likely gained traction in Francophone communities in France, Quebec, West Africa, and the Caribbean, where French-language biblical naming has long been practiced with creative flair.
Today Azarie has an ambiguous gender quality that suits contemporary naming sensibilities — it has been used for both boys and girls, though its soft ending makes it more frequently feminine in recent usage. Its relative rarity in English-speaking contexts gives it a distinctive profile: instantly recognizable as rooted in something ancient and meaningful, yet fresh to the modern ear.