Here you’ll find 40 Mythological girl names that start with D, organized from “Dakshayani” to “Dynamene”. These names span cultures and eras, often linked to goddesses, heroines, and mythic figures. Use them for baby names, fictional characters, or cultural research.
Mythological girl names that start with D are female names from myths and legends beginning with the letter D. For example, “Dakshayani” appears in Hindu tradition as an early form of the goddess Parvati.
Below you’ll find the table with Name, Pronunciation, Origin, Meaning/Role, and Notes.
Name: The given mythological name as it appears in sources; you can scan this column to pick candidates quickly.
Pronunciation: A simple phonetic guide helps you say the name correctly and test how it sounds aloud for names or characters.
Origin: Lists the culture or mythic tradition tied to each name so you can assess cultural context and historical resonance.
Meaning/Role: Gives a concise meaning or mythological role, showing whether the name belongs to a goddess, heroine, or symbolic figure.
Notes: Includes variants, modern usage notes, cross-links to related names, and any brief usage frequency comments you might need.
Mythological girl names that start with D
| Name | Pronunciation | Origin/Culture | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demeter | deh-MEE-ter | Greek — Homer/Hesiod | Goddess of agriculture and grain |
| Diana | dye-AH-nuh | Roman — Ovid/Varro | Goddess of the hunt, moon, childbirth |
| Dione | die-OH-nee | Greek — Hesiod | Titaness, sometimes mother of Aphrodite |
| Daphne | DAF-nee | Greek — Ovid | Nymph transformed into a laurel tree |
| Danae | DAH-nay | Greek — Apollodorus/Ovid | Princess, mother of Perseus |
| Deianira | deh-ee-AH-nih-ruh | Greek — Sophocles | Wife of Heracles, inadvertent cause of his death |
| Deidamia | dee-uh-DAY-mee-uh | Greek — Apollodorus | Princess, mother of Neoptolemus by Achilles |
| Dike | DIE-kee | Greek — Hesiod | Goddess/personification of justice and moral order |
| Despoina | des-POY-nuh | Greek — Pausanias | Arcadian goddess of mysteries, “mistress” |
| Doris | DOR-is | Greek — Hesiod | Oceanid, mother of the Nereids |
| Dryope | DRY-oh-pee | Greek — Ovid | Nymph transformed into a tree |
| Dynamene | dy-NAM-eh-nee | Greek — Nereid lists | Nereid associated with the might of the sea |
| Doto | DOH-toh | Greek — Hesiod/Nereid lists | One of the Nereids, sea nymph |
| Delia | DEL-ee-uh | Greek/Roman — epithet of Artemis | From Delos, epithet of Artemis |
| Deirdre | DEER-druh | Irish — Ulster Cycle | Tragic heroine, “of the Sorrows” |
| Danu | DAH-noo | Irish — Lebor Gabála Érenn | Mother goddess of the Tuatha Dé Danann |
| Danu | DAH-noo | Vedic — Rigveda | Primeval goddess, ancestor of Danavas |
| Deichtine | DEK-tee-nuh | Irish — Ulster Cycle | Mother/aunt of hero Cú Chulainn |
| Disa | DEE-sah | Norse/Scandinavian — Disa saga | Legendary wise maiden who saves a people |
| Dis | DIS | Norse — Poetic Edda/Sagas | Female spirit or goddess (dísir) |
| Dalia | DAH-lee-uh | Lithuanian — Baltic folklore | Goddess of fate and destiny |
| Devana | deh-VAH-nah | Slavic — folklore | Goddess of the hunt, like Diana |
| Dodola | doh-DOH-luh | Slavic — folk ritual | Rain-bringing goddess invoked in drought rites |
| Durga | DOOR-gah | Hindu — Puranas | Warrior goddess who slays demons, protector |
| Draupadi | DROW-puh-dee | Hindu — Mahabharata | Central heroine, wife of the Pandavas |
| Diti | DEE-tee | Vedic/Hindu — Rigveda | Mother of the Daityas (demons) |
| Damayanti | dah-MAH-yahn-tee | Hindu — Nala & Damayanti story | Princess famed for beauty, fidelity, and love |
| Devaki | deh-VAH-kee | Hindu — Bhagavata Purana | Mother of Krishna |
| Dakshayani | dahk-SHAH-yuh-nee | Hindu — Puranas | Name of Parvati as Daksha’s daughter |
| Damkina | dam-KEE-nah | Mesopotamian — Sumerian myths | Consort of Enki/Ea, mother figure |
| Duttur | DUT-ur | Sumerian/Mesopotamian — Sumerian myth | Shepherdess-mother goddess, mother of Dumuzi |
| Derceto | der-SEH-toh | Syrian/Greek — Classical sources | Syrian sea-goddess later linked to Atargatis |
| Delilah | de-LIE-luh | Hebrew/Biblical — Judges | Philistine woman who betrays Samson |
| Dewi | DEH-wee | Austronesian — Balinese/Javanese lore | Title for a goddess; e.g., rice goddess Dewi Sri |
| Dali | DAH-lee | Georgian — Caucasian folklore | Goddess of the hunt and mountain game |
| Dindrane | DIN-drayn | Arthurian — Vulgate Cycle | Grail maiden, daughter of Percival |
| Dindymene | din-DIM-eh-nee | Phrygian/Greek — cult of Cybele | Epithet of Cybele, the mountain mother |
| Dido | DYE-doh | Phoenician/Roman — Virgil’s Aeneid | Queen of Carthage, tragic founder |
| Deiomede | day-ee-OH-meh-dee | Greek — Epic-cycle/Quintus Smyrnaeus | Amazon warrior, one of the female fighters |
| Dana | DAY-nuh | Irish/Celtic — variant of Danu | Alternate form of the Irish mother goddess Danu |