From Old English wis meaning 'wise, learned,' originally a byname for a sagacious person.
Wise as a given name descends from the Old English adjective wīs, meaning "learned, sagacious, possessed of good judgment" — a quality so valued in pre-Conquest England that it became both a surname and, occasionally, a personal name. In the medieval period, virtue names occupied an honored place in the naming culture of Europe; Prudence, Patience, Grace, and Faith survived long enough to become familiar, while their less common companions — including Wise — receded into occasional use. The surname Wise is found across England and in Jewish communities as an Anglicization of Weiss (German for "white"), and many American bearers of Wise as a first name are honoring a family surname.
The name's meaning aligns it with the Sapiential tradition — the ancient Hebrew and Greek celebration of wisdom as the highest virtue. In the Book of Proverbs, wisdom is personified as a woman who builds her house and calls to passersby; in Greek philosophy, the love of wisdom (philo-sophia) was the organizing principle of intellectual life. To name a child Wise is, in this sense, to inscribe an aspiration — not a descriptor of what the child already is, but an orientation toward what they might become and what their parents most deeply value.
Contemporary use of Wise as a first name is uncommon but not unheard of, appearing most often in communities with traditions of surname-as-given-name or virtue-name usage, including some African American and evangelical Christian families. It carries a quiet gravitas — monosyllabic and unpretentious, completely unambiguous in meaning, with a certain philosophical confidence that more decorative names cannot match.