Here you’ll find 5 Angel names that start with H, organized from “Hadraniel” to “Helel”. These names tend to come from Hebrew and late antique angelology, and they serve parents, writers, and spiritual seekers.

Angel names that start with H are personal names given to celestial beings beginning with the letter H. A notable example is “Helel,” which appears in ancient texts and later traditions with debated meanings.

Below you’ll find the table with Name, Pronunciation, Gender, Meaning/Origin, and Notes/Sources.

Name: The angel’s standard name as found in texts and traditions, which you can use as the primary label.

Pronunciation: Simple respelling and optional IPA to help you say the name accurately in conversation or writing.

Gender: Typical gender association and how commonly the name is used for males, females, or neutrally in modern and historical contexts.

Meaning/Origin: Concise etymology and signification to show roots and help you understand cultural or linguistic background.

Notes/Sources: Brief notes on rarity, disputes, or variants, plus one authoritative source citation you can follow for more detail.

Angel names that start with H

NameGenderPronunciationMeaning/Origin
HanielFemaleHAN-ee-el (ˈhæn.i.əl)Grace of God
HadranielMalehad-RAN-ee-el (hædˈræn.i.əl)Majesty of God
HarutMaleHA-root (həˈruːt)Name in Qur’anic account
HelelMale/UnknownHEH-lel (ˈhe.lɛl)Morning star/Bright one
HahasiahUnknownha-HAH-see-ah (həˈhæs.i.ə)Hidden of God

Descriptions

Haniel
Angel associated with Venus and divine grace in Jewish mystical and later occult traditions; appears in medieval Kabbalistic and magical texts (Kabbalah; Sefer Raziel; Davidson, A Dictionary of Angels).
Hadraniel
High-ranking angel in Jewish apocalyptic sources; appears in 3 Enoch as a mighty gatekeeper who questions Metatron (3 Enoch; Jewish mystical literature).
Harut
One of the pair Harut and Marut in Qur’an 2:102, sent to Babylon and said to have taught magic; discussed in Islamic tafsir as a testor/fallen figure (Qur’an 2:102; classical tafsir).
Helel
Helel ben Shachar appears in Isaiah 14:12 (“morning star”); Latin Vulgate used “Lucifer”; later Christian tradition connects the term with the fallen angel/Satan (Isaiah 14:12; Christian interpretive tradition).
Hahasiah
Listed among the 72 angels of the Shem HaMephorash in later Kabbalistic/magical compilations; associated with secrecy, prayer, and spiritual insight in occult tradition (Shem HaMephorash; medieval Kabbalah).
If you think there is a missing term, let us know using the contact form.