From the English word for the bird of prey, used as a bold nature and surname-style given name.
Hawk descends from the Old English hafoc and the Proto-Germanic *habukaz, words for the bird of prey that range across the northern hemisphere — swift, precise, far-seeing. For most of English history it was a surname, and a distinguished one: among its bearers was the fictional science-fiction writer Ellis Hawk, and more prominently, the aeronautics pioneer Tony Hawk lent it unexpected youthful currency in the late twentieth century through a different kind of flight entirely — skateboarding. The name also surfaces in Native American traditions across many nations, where Hawk is a spirit messenger bridging the human world and the sky, carrying prayers upward and visions downward.
As a given name, Hawk belongs to the tradition of nature names that surged in American and British naming culture from the 1970s onward, accelerating in the twenty-first century as parents reached beyond the classical canon toward the natural world. Names like River, Stone, Wren, and Sage paved the way; Hawk is the raptor version of that impulse — unambiguously strong, one syllable, impossible to nickname down. Culturally, the hawk is a symbol of focus and visionary clarity in Indigenous American traditions, a royal hunting companion in medieval European falconry, and a figure of martial courage in ancient Egyptian iconography where the god Horus wore the head of a falcon.
That layered symbolism gives the name more depth than its brevity suggests. It carries the idea of a life lived at altitude, with a clear eye on what matters.