Likely related to Azariah or similar Semitic names meaning helped by God.
Azeria is a name of lyrical obscurity, sitting at the confluence of several possible origins. Its most compelling etymology traces it to the Semitic root shared by names like Azariah — from the Hebrew *azaryahu*, meaning "helped by God" or "whom Jehovah aids." This root produced a constellation of names across the ancient Near East, and Azeria reads as a feminization of that tradition, softened and elongated into something almost botanical.
The *-ia* suffix, common in Latin and Greek feminine names, wraps it in classical drapery. Some scholars also note resonance with the Caucasus region — Azerbaijan takes its name from the ancient Persian *Āturpātakān*, meaning "land of sacred fire," and Azeria has occasionally been used as a poetic personification of that geography. In this reading, the name carries the spirit of ancient fire-worship traditions and the silk-road crossroads cultures of the South Caucasus, evoking frankincense, lapis lazuli, and mountain passes.
As a given name, Azeria is genuinely rare, which is precisely its contemporary appeal. Parents drawn to names ending in *-ia* — Aria, Amara, Aurelia — but seeking something truly singular are discovering Azeria. It sounds ancient without feeling antiquated, exotic without being unpronounceable. It is, in the best sense, a name still being written into its own history.