Short form of Richard, from Germanic 'ric-hard' meaning powerful ruler.
Rick is the snappy short form of Richard, a name of thoroughly Germanic construction: *ric* (ruler, power) joined to *hard* (brave, strong), yielding something close to "powerful ruler" or "strong in power." Richard arrived in England with the Normans in 1066 and immediately proved hardy, carried by three English kings — including Richard I, "the Lionheart," the crusading warrior-king whose historical reputation outgrew the messy reality of his reign to become a staple of Arthurian-adjacent legend. The diminutives Rick and Rich have served as the name's informal counterparts for centuries.
As a standalone given name, Rick came into its own in the twentieth century, particularly in North America. Its associations run the gamut of American popular culture: Rick Springfield brought blue-eyed pop to the 1980s; Rick Rubin quietly built hip-hop and rock's defining sonic signatures in the decades since; Rick Astley became an unlikely internet legend through the phenomenon of Rickrolling. In fiction, Casablanca's Rick Blaine — Humphrey Bogart's laconic, principled nightclub owner — may be the single most iconic bearers, a man whose one-syllable name perfectly suits his economy of speech and emotion.
In the twenty-first century Rick has developed a curious dual life: it remains a living name given to children, but it also appears as a knowing retro choice, adjacent to the vintage revival of names like Gary, Doug, and Dale. *Rick and Morty* introduced a brilliant, nihilistic scientist named Rick Sanchez to a generation of animated television viewers, ensuring the name stays culturally current in unexpected ways. Rick is short, direct, and carries the comfortable weight of mid-century American confidence.