Variant of Emery, from Germanic 'Amalric' meaning brave power or industrious ruler.
Embry is a name that moves between old roots and modern freshness with unusual ease. It is generally understood as a variant of Emery or Emory, from the Old High German *Amalric* — a compound of *amal* (labor, vigor, the name of a powerful Visigoth dynasty) and *ric* (power, ruler), yielding something like "industrious ruler" or "vigorous power." Through Norman French influence, Amalric became Amauri, then Emery, and eventually scattered into variant spellings across English-speaking cultures.
Embry as a distinct spelling has a smaller, more specific history. It appears in colonial American records as both a surname and given name, particularly in Virginia and the Carolinas, suggesting Welsh or West Country English heritage. The Welsh form Emrys — famously borne by the legendary magician Myrddin Emrys (Merlin) in Arthurian mythology, whose name means "immortal" in Welsh — may be a parallel influence on the Embry spelling, lending it an additional layer of Celtic magic.
In contemporary culture, Embry Call is a character in Stephenie Meyer's *Twilight* saga, which introduced the name to a generation of readers and gave it a youthful, wild, slightly supernatural feel. It sits at an interesting intersection: old enough to have genuine history, rare enough to feel fresh, and shaped well for both boys and girls. The two-syllable lilt ending in the soft *-ree* sound makes it warm and approachable without sacrificing distinctiveness.