Likely a modern Hispanic form related to Yisel or Giselle and sometimes influenced by Isabel traditions.
Yissel is a name with roots in the Spanish-speaking Caribbean, particularly in the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, where a tradition of musical, inventive feminine naming has flourished for generations. The name is often understood as a variant or creative rendering of Giselle — itself a Germanic name from gisil, meaning "pledge" or "hostage" in the sense of a noble child given as security, a term that evolved into associations with noble lineage and trust. Giselle entered popular culture most powerfully through the 1841 Romantic ballet of the same name, where a young peasant woman dies of heartbreak and becomes a spirit who protects her unfaithful lover — a role that has defined dramatic ballerina performance for nearly two centuries.
In Caribbean Spanish phonology, the hard G of Giselle softens and shifts, and the Latinized spelling conventions that govern names like Yolanda, Yanet, and Yomara produce Yissel as a naturalized form. The Y opening is characteristic of a cluster of names beloved in Dominican naming culture — Yariela, Yokasta, Yenifer — where the Y replaces J or G sounds, creating names that look distinctly regional while sounding familiar to broader ears. Yissel is thus both a cultural artifact and a living name: it encodes a diaspora's relationship to European forms, filtered through a Caribbean sensibility.
As communities from the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico have grown throughout the United States, Yissel has traveled with them, remaining a name with strong cultural specificity. It is rarely found outside these communities, which gives it the quality of a marker — a name that carries geographic and cultural memory, that tells a story of migration and reinvention without saying a word. It is melodious, feminine, and quietly extraordinary.