Variant spelling of Chris, a short form of Christopher, from Greek meaning 'bearer of Christ.'
Chriss is a distinctive spelling variant of Chris, itself the ancient Greek-rooted short form of Christopher — Χριστόφορος (Christophoros), meaning "bearer of Christ." The name entered Western Europe through the veneration of Saint Christopher, a legendary third-century martyr depicted carrying the Christ child across a river. That image of strength in service made the name enormously popular throughout the medieval Christian world, spreading from Spain to Scandinavia and eventually to the Americas.
The contracted form Chris — and its variant Chriss — began to stand on its own as an independent given name in the twentieth century, no longer merely a nickname. Notable bearers across generations have included Chris Marker, the French avant-garde filmmaker, and countless athletes, musicians, and leaders across cultures. The double-s spelling of Chriss quietly signals individuality: a deliberate pen-stroke that distinguishes the bearer without straying far from the familiar.
Today the name occupies comfortable, approachable territory — universally recognizable yet never overused. The doubled letter gives Chriss a visual symmetry that its single-s sibling lacks, lending a quietly modern sensibility to a name with roots stretching back two millennia. It carries warmth, accessibility, and just a trace of the old pilgrimage story: someone steady enough to carry a heavy load across deep water.