From Old High German uodal (heritage) and rīhhi (ruler), meaning 'ruler of the homeland.'
Ulrich is a name of venerable Germanic lineage, composed of two Old High German elements: uodal, meaning "heritage" or "ancestral estate," and rihhi, meaning "power" or "ruler." Together they form a name that translates roughly as "ruler of the homeland" — a fitting designation for the warrior aristocracy of early medieval Germany. The name was common among Frankish and Bavarian nobility and gained widespread prestige through Saint Ulrich of Augsburg, a tenth-century bishop canonized in 993 AD, making him one of the first people formally canonized by a pope rather than by popular acclamation.
In the Holy Roman Empire, Ulrich was a name worn by counts, dukes, and church leaders for centuries. It appears prominently in Swiss history — Ulrich Zwingli, the sixteenth-century reformer who transformed Zurich and sparked the Swiss Reformation, brought the name into Protestant as well as Catholic consciousness. The name also appears in medieval German literature and remained a staple of German-speaking regions through the nineteenth century, when it was borne by the Austrian composer Ulrich of Liechtenstein.
In the English-speaking world, Ulrich has always been something of a rarity — exotic enough to feel literary and distinguished, yet with an unambiguous pronunciation (OOL-rich) that poses no practical difficulties. In the twenty-first century it has attracted parents drawn to Nordic and Germanic names with deep historical roots. It carries an unmistakable old-world gravity: sturdy, uncommon, and impossible to diminish.