Here you’ll find 31 Mythological girl names that start with R, organized from “Radha” to “Rán”. These names span many traditions and often reflect deities, heroines, or legendary figures, useful for parents, writers, and baby-name hunters.

Mythological girl names that start with R are female names taken from myths and legends and beginning with R. Many carry symbolic roles, with well-known examples like “Radha,” central in Hindu devotional stories.

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

Name: The mythological name as commonly written; you can scan it for style, sound, and cultural cues.

Origin: The culture or tradition linked to each name, helping you choose names with the right mythic background.

Pronunciation: A simple phonetic guide so you say names correctly and hear how they would sound aloud.

Meaning/Role: A brief translation or description of the name and the mythological role associated with it.

Notes: Short usage tips, modern variants, or interesting cultural details that help you compare similar choices.

Mythological girl names that start with R

NameOriginPronunciationMeaning
RheaGreekREE-AHMother of the gods; fertility titaness
Rhea SilviaRomanREE-AH SIL-VEE-AHVestal virgin; mother of Romulus and Remus
RánNorseRANSea goddess who captures the drowned
RindrNorseRIN-DRGiantess who mothers Vali to avenge Baldr
RoskvaNorseROSK-KVAHHousehold servant who travels with Thor
RambhaHinduRAM-BAHApsara; celestial nymph famed for beauty
RatiHinduRAH-TEEGoddess of love and sexual pleasure
RadhaHinduRAH-DAHBeloved of Krishna; symbol of devotional love
RukminiHinduRUK-MIH-NEEPrincipal wife of Krishna; queen and heroine
RohiniHinduROH-HEE-NEEWife of Vasudeva; lunar mansion personified
RevatiHinduREH-VAH-TEEWife of Balarama; associated with stars
RatriHinduRAH-TREEPersonification and goddess of night
RudraniHinduROOD-RAH-NEEFeminine form of Rudra; protective goddess epithet
RenenutetEgyptianREN-EH-NOO-TETSerpent goddess of harvest and nourishment
RenpetEgyptianREN-PETPersonification of the year and youthful abundance
RuminaRomanROO-MI-NAHGoddess protecting breastfeeding infants and milk
RobigoRomanROH-BIH-GOGoddess invoked to protect crops from rust
RhiannonWelshRHEE-AN-ONOtherworld queen linked to horses and sovereignty
RusalkaSlavicROO-SAL-KAHWater spirit or nymph, sometimes dangerous
RozhanitsaSlavicROH-ZHAH-NEE-TSAHSpirits/goddesses of birth, fate, and motherhood
RhedaAnglo-SaxonRHEE-DAHGoddess linked to a spring month and fertility rites
RosmertaCelticROS-MER-TAHGaulish goddess of abundance and prosperity
RhodeGreekROHDNymph of Rhodes; island eponym and sea-nymph
RhodopisGreek-EgyptianROH-DOH-PISLegendary courtesan whose tale resembles Cinderella
RhoeoGreekROH-EE-OHLover of Apollo; mother of the prophet Anius
RhodopeGreekROH-DOH-PEEThracian queen transformed into a mountain
RangdaBalineseRANG-DAHDemonic queen and witch-figure in Balinese ritual drama
RonaMāoriROH-NAHWoman associated with the moon in Māori legend
ReitiaGaulishREH-EE-TEE-AHGoddess of healing, springs, and literacy rites
RomaRomanROH-MAHPersonification and goddess symbolizing the city of Rome
RognedaSlavicROG-NEH-DAHLegendary princess in East Slavic chronicles and saga-material

Descriptions

Rhea
Titaness who bore Zeus and the Olympians, symbolizing motherhood and earth-fertility in Greek myth (Hesiod) (britannica.com).
Rhea Silvia
Vestal who bore Rome’s founders Romulus and Remus after Mars’s intervention; key figure in Rome’s founding legend (Livy) (britannica.com).
Rán
Norse sea-goddess who uses a net to claim drowned sailors, wife of Ægir, featured in Eddic poetry (Poetic Edda) (Snorri/Edda).
Rindr
Jotunn who bears Vali as part of the gods’ vengeance plot after Baldr’s death; attested in Norse sagas (Prose Edda) (Snorri/Edda).
Roskva
Young servant who accompanies Thor (alongside Þjálfi) on mythic journeys; appears in Prose Edda tales (Snorri/Edda).
Rambha
Famous apsara (celestial dancer) in Puranic and epic stories, often sent to distract sages (britannica.com) (Monier-Williams).
Rati
Consort of Kama, goddess of desire and erotic love invoked in Vedic hymns and later Puranic texts (Rigveda) (britannica.com).
Radha
Gopi beloved of Krishna and central figure in bhakti devotion, emblematic of divine romantic love (Bhagavata Purana) (britannica.com).
Rukmini
Chief consort of Krishna, princess-heroine in Mahabharata and Puranic narratives, famed for elopement story (Mahabharata) (Puranas).
Rohini
Mother of Balarama in some accounts and name of a nakshatra (lunar mansion) in Vedic astronomy (Mahabharata) (britannica.com).
Revati
Princess who marries Balarama; also the name of a nakshatra with astrological significance (Mahabharata) (Puranas).
Ratri
Vedic goddess embodying night, invoked in Rigvedic hymns as a cosmic power (Rigveda) (britannica.com).
Rudrani
Epithet of the goddess (Parvati/Durga) representing Shiva/Rudra’s fierce feminine aspect in Puranic literature (Puranas) (britannica.com).
Renenutet
Egyptian snake goddess protecting grain, fertility, and childbirth; often depicted nursing royals (britannica.com) (Egyptian Museum).
Renpet
Egyptian goddess representing the year and perpetual youth, appearing in New Kingdom inscriptions (Wilkinson/2003) (britannica.com).
Rumina
Roman deity who safeguarded nursing infants and mothers; had a shrine near a fig tree in Rome (Ovid) (britannica.com).
Robigo
Roman deity of grain rust, honored in the Robigalia to prevent crop disease (Varro) (Livy).
Rhiannon
Prominent Mabinogi figure: mysterious otherworldly queen associated with horses, sovereignty, and fate (Mabinogion) (Lady Guest).
Rusalka
Slavic water spirit appearing in folklore as alluring yet potentially deadly, beloved in folktales and later literature (Afanasiev) (britannica.com).
Rozhanitsa
Domestic Slavic deities who oversee childbirth, family welfare, and fate; invoked in folk rituals (Afanasiev) (folklore studies).
Rheda
Deity named by Bede as honored by Anglo-Saxons; associated with the month Hreða and spring rites (Bede/8thc) (britannica.com).
Rosmerta
Celtic mother-goddess of fertility and plenty, often paired with Mercury in Gallo-Roman inscriptions (Celtic inscriptions) (britannica.com).
Rhode
Nymph or Oceanid associated with the island of Rhodes, invoked in local origin myths and cults (Hesiod) (Homeric Hymns).
Rhodopis
Greek courtesan in Egypt mentioned by Herodotus; later evolved into a Cinderella-like folktale (Herodotus) (britannica.com).
Rhoeo
Daughter of Staphylus who bore Anius to Apollo; appears in mythic genealogies and poetry (Apollodorus) (Ovid).
Rhodope
Thracian princess punished and turned into the Rhodope mountains in classical mythic accounts (Ovid) (classical sources).
Rangda
Fearsome witch-queen of Balinese folklore, antagonist in Barong rituals and traditional performances (Geertz) (britannica.com).
Rona
Figure in Māori lunar legend who, in some tellings, is taken to or dwells on the moon; part of oral tradition (Te Ara NZ) (Māori sources).
Reitia
Gaulish goddess worshipped at healing springs, known from inscriptions and votive offerings (Gaulish inscriptions) (britannica.com).
Roma
Divine personification of Rome venerated as a protective and civic goddess in Roman religion (Livy) (britannica.com).
Rogneda
Princess of Polotsk featured in the Primary Chronicle and saga traditions, blending history and legend (Primary Chronicle) (britannica.com).
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