From Old French "paroisse," denoting someone who lived near or worked for a parish church.
Parish derives from the Old French paroisse and Latin parochia, themselves from the Greek paroikia — a community of dwellers (paroikos: one who dwells beside others). In medieval Christian Europe, the parish was the foundational unit of community life, the territory served by a single church and its priest, the geography of baptisms, marriages, deaths, and seasonal rhythms. To say a family was from a parish was to say where their roots went deepest.
The surname Parish thus identified someone strongly associated with parish life — perhaps a church official, or simply a family long settled in one ecclesiastical district. As a surname, Parish has appeared across English-speaking history in various spellings — Parrish, Parish, Parris. The painter Maxfield Parrish (1870–1966) brought his version of the name into American cultural memory with luminous, dreamlike illustrations that defined a certain golden early-twentieth-century American aesthetic.
His saturated blues — Parrish blue became a color reference — lent the name a visual, almost chromatic identity. The Reverend Samuel Parris, controversially central to the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, gave it a darker historical footnote. As a given name, Parish sits in the growing tradition of ecclesiastical and place-connected surnames repurposed as first names — alongside names like Bishop, Canon, and Minster.
It has a clean, two-syllable cadence and carries an air of rootedness: this is a name tied to community, to a specific piece of consecrated ground, to the idea that identity is shaped by belonging somewhere. In an era of increasing mobility and rootlessness, there is something quietly countercultural about naming a child Parish.