Modern invented variant of Zariah, a creative respelling inspired by the Arabic name Zara meaning flower.
Xariyah is a bold, visually striking variant of the name Zariyah, itself derived from the ancient city of Zaria in northern Nigeria, historically known as Zazzau. Founded by a legendary queen in the fifteenth century, Zazzau became one of the most powerful Hausa city-states in West Africa, and the name carried the quiet authority of that heritage across generations. The Arabic root zara or zariya also contributes a parallel current of meaning — "radiance," "blooming," or "one who shines" — threading Islamic and African traditions together.
The name gained broader recognition in the West partly through Zaria, a figure in medieval Slavic mythology associated with the morning star, the dawn goddess who unlocks the gates of the sky. This dual cultural inheritance — African queenship and Slavic celestial myth — gives the name an unusual depth for something that reads as thoroughly modern. The X spelling transforms the name visually, turning an opening soft sound into something angular and confident on the page.
This kind of orthographic individuation became a strong current in American naming from the 1990s onward, allowing parents to signal uniqueness while preserving phonetic connection to a name with genuine historical roots. Xariyah is thus simultaneously ancient and invented — a name that looks like the future and sounds like history.