A spelling variant of Jashiel/Jazel, linked to Hebrew roots with *-el* ("God") and strength-related meaning: "God is strength."
Jhaziel is a modern orthographic flourish on the ancient Hebrew name Haziel (חֲזִיאֵל), meaning "vision of God" or "God has seen." The root חָזָה (chazah) carries the sense of prophetic sight — to behold a divine revelation — making it a name saturated with spiritual depth. Haziel appears in the Old Testament as a Levite, one of the sons of Shimei listed in the genealogies of Chronicles, tying the name to a lineage of sacred service and priestly duty.
The variant spelling Jhaziel emerged in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, particularly within Latin American and African American communities drawn to Biblical names that carried both religious weight and phonetic distinctiveness. The stylized "Jh-" opening gives the name a visual individuality while preserving the soft "zh" or "y" sound of the original. In cultures where names are seen as declarations of faith, Jhaziel functions as a daily reminder that the child is seen and known by God.
Today Jhaziel sits at the intersection of ancient scripture and contemporary naming creativity. It appeals to parents who want a name that is deeply rooted yet unlikely to appear three times in a classroom roll call. The name carries gravitas without severity, spirituality without formality — a quality that has made Hebrew-origin names enduringly popular across generations and continents.