Variant of Zuriah, from Hebrew meaning 'God is my rock', with the devotional -iah suffix.
Zuriyah is a name that weaves together two powerful naming traditions. Its opening syllable Zuri connects to the Swahili word for beautiful — a name that has traveled widely out of East Africa into the global naming vocabulary, carrying with it the warmth and vibrancy of Swahili-speaking cultures across Kenya, Tanzania, and beyond. The concluding -yah suffix echoes the Hebrew theophoric ending found in names like Elijah, Isaiah, and Jeremiah, where yah is a shortened form of Yahweh, the divine name.
This gives Zuriyah a resonance meaning something close to "beautiful through God" or "God's beauty." Alternatively, the name may be understood as a variant of Zuriel, the Hebrew name meaning "God is my rock," borne by a leader of the Merari clan in the Book of Numbers. The feminization and softening of that tradition into Zuriyah produces a name that feels both scripturally grounded and freshly imagined, as if discovered rather than inherited wholesale.
The -iyah ending is also found in Arabic feminine names, giving the name appeal across a range of cultural contexts. In the contemporary naming landscape, Zuriyah belongs to the growing family of names that honor African linguistic heritage alongside Abrahamic spiritual tradition — a combination that resonates particularly within African American communities seeking names that reflect both ancestral roots and spiritual depth. Its five syllables move with rhythm and fullness, and its Z opening gives it a striking first impression that makes it memorable long after the first encounter.