From Old French 'lou' or German 'Löwe' meaning 'lion,' or from a place name meaning 'hill.'
Lowe is a name of layered European etymology, drawing from at least two distinct linguistic streams. In its Germanic derivation, it descends from Löwe, the German word for lion, connecting it to a long tradition of leonine names — Leo, Leon, Leonard — that symbolized courage and nobility. In its English stream, it derives from the Old English hlaw, meaning a hill or burial mound, making it a topographic surname for families who lived near prominent earthworks, many of which were ancient and sacred in the pre-Norman landscape.
Both derivations carry their own grandeur: the king of beasts and the ancestral hill. As a surname, Lowe has produced a remarkably varied roster of notable figures. Rob Lowe brought the name Hollywood glamour in the 1980s and 1990s.
Nick Lowe, the British singer-songwriter and producer, gave the name a cool, understated musical pedigree — he produced the Stiff Records era and wrote 'Cruel to Be Kind.' S. Lowry, born Laurence Stephen Lowry, captured the industrial landscapes of Northern England in a body of work that made his name synonymous with a distinctly unglamorous, honest aesthetic beauty.
As a given name, Lowe is exceptionally rare, which is perhaps its greatest asset in an era saturated with familiar choices. It is punchy and complete — one syllable, ending in that warm open vowel sound — and wears its dual heritage (lion and landscape) with an ease that longer names cannot achieve. For parents who want something brief, distinctive, and etymologically rich, Lowe offers a quietly extraordinary option.