From Arabic al-Jazira meaning 'the island' or 'peninsula'; associated with the renowned medieval Muslim engineer al-Jazari.
Jazari carries one of the most remarkable intellectual inheritances of any name on this list. It refers directly to Badīʿ az-Zamān Abū l-ʿIzz Ismāʿīl ibn ar-Razzāz al-Jazarī — the twelfth-century Arab polymath, engineer, and inventor who served the Artuqid kings of Diyarbakır and produced, around 1206, the Kitāb fī maʿrifat al-ḥiyal al-handasiyya: the Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices. It is among the most extraordinary technical documents of the medieval world, describing fifty mechanical inventions including programmable automata, crankshaft-connecting-rod mechanisms, water-raising machines, and elaborate clocks — innovations that anticipate principles not rediscovered in Europe for centuries.
Al-Jazari is now credited by historians of science as the father of robotics and modern engineering. The geographical root of his epithet — al-Jazira, the island — refers to the Fertile Crescent region between the upper Tigris and Euphrates rivers, a name meaning island or peninsula in Arabic. The region was a cradle of civilization before it became, through al-Jazari's life and work, a cradle of mechanical invention.
As a given name, Jazari thus compresses an entire geography and a singular genius into four syllables. In contemporary usage Jazari is exceptionally rare as a first name, but it has gained currency in circles interested in Islamic intellectual history, STEM education, and the recovery of non-European contributions to science. It reads as strong and distinctive without being harsh, and its association with creativity, ingenuity, and cross-cultural knowledge transmission gives it a depth that purely invented names cannot claim.