This list includes 72 Mythological girl names that start with A, from “Aditi” to “Aya”. They come from diverse mythologies and often reflect deity roles, virtues, or natural forces. Use them for baby names, character naming, or thematic research.

Mythological girl names that start with A are given names drawn from ancient myths, legends, and sacred stories. For example, “Aditi” is a major Vedic mother-goddess associated with the sky and cosmic order.

Below you’ll find the table with [COLUMN_NAMES]

Name: The mythological name itself, shown alphabetically so you can quickly scan and choose favorites.

Pronunciation: A simple phonetic guide or IPA to help you say the name correctly and judge its sound.

Origin: The culture or mythic tradition listed so you know a name’s historical and geographic background.

Meaning/Role: A concise translation or mythological role showing why the name mattered in its original stories.

Variants & Usage: Common modern spellings, related names, and notes on contemporary use or popularity.

Notes & Sources: Brief context, cross-links to related names, and concise citations for further reading.

Mythological girl names that start with A

NamePronunciationOriginMeaning/Role
Aphroditeaf-ROH-dih-teeGreekGoddess of love and beauty
AthenaATH-uh-nuhGreekWisdom and war goddess
Artemisar-TEM-issGreekHunt, moon, childbirth goddess
AriadneAIR-ee-ad-neeGreekCretan princess; labyrinth helper
Atalantaat-uh-LAN-tuhGreekHeroine; famed huntress and swift runner
Alcmeneal-MEE-neeGreekMother of Heracles
Andromachean-DROH-muh-keeGreekWife of Hector; tragic figure
Andromedaan-DROH-muh-duhGreekPrincess rescued by Perseus
Antigonean-TIG-uh-neeGreekTragic heroine; filial piety
Antheiaan-THEE-uhGreekGoddess of flowers and blossoms
Aeginaee-JEE-nuhGreekNymph; mother of Aeacus
AegleEE-gleeGreekNymph of radiant health
Aglaeaag-LAY-uhGreekGrace of splendor (Charite)
Agaveuh-GAH-veeGreekMother who kills son in frenzy
Arachneuh-RAHK-neeGreekWeaver turned into a spider
Arethusauh-RETH-oo-suhGreekNaiad transformed into a spring
Asteriaas-TEER-ee-uhGreekTitaness of stars and nocturnal divination
Astraeaas-TRAY-uhGreekJustice personified; star maiden
Amphitriteam-FIH-tritGreekSea goddess; Poseidon’s consort
Amaltheaam-AL-thee-uhGreekNurse/goat who fed infant Zeus
Alcyoneal-SY-oh-neeGreekPleiad; grieving lover transformed into bird
AethraEE-thrahGreekMother of Theseus
Admetead-MEH-teeGreekDaughter of Eurystheus; linked to labors
Althaeaal-THAY-uhGreekMother of Meleager; linked to fate
Alcippeal-SIP-eeGreekMinor noblewoman; Ares’ daughter in variant tales
Anankeah-NAN-keeGreekPersonification of necessity and fate
AuraAW-rahGreekBreeze nymph; attendant of Artemis
Auroraaw-ROAR-uhRomanDawn goddess
Anna PerennaAN-uh peh-REN-nuhRomanYear and renewal goddess
Amataah-MAH-tahRomanQueen in the Aeneid; opposed Aeneas
Allectoah-LEK-tohRomanOne of the Furies; brings unrest
Anatah-NATCanaanite/UgariticWarrior and fertility goddess
Astarteas-TAR-teeCanaanite/PhoenicianGoddess of love and war
Asetah-SETEgyptianEgyptian name for Isis
Anuketah-NOO-ketEgyptianNile cataract and fertility goddess
Amunetah-MOO-netEgyptianFemale counterpart to Amun
AnputAN-pootEgyptianFunerary goddess; female Anubis
AmmutAM-mootEgyptianDevourer of the unworthy dead
Anahitaah-NAH-hee-tahIranian/PersianGoddess of waters, fertility, healing
Amaterasuah-mah-teh-RAH-sooShinto/JapaneseSun goddess; central Shinto deity
Ame-no-Uzumeah-meh-no-oo-ZOO-mehShinto/JapaneseDawn, revelry, and mirth goddess
AnuAH-nooCeltic (Irish)Mother/sovereignty goddess (Anu/Anann)
AineAWN-yehIrishGoddess of summer, love, sovereignty
AoifeEE-faIrishWarrior princess and legendary heroine
AirmidAIR-midIrishHealing and herbalist goddess
Anjanaan-JAH-nahHinduMother of Hanuman; vanara matron
Aditiah-DEE-teeVedic/HinduMother of the gods; cosmic mother
Anasuyaah-nah-SOO-yahHinduChaste wife noted for devotion and miracle
Annapurnauh-nuh-POOR-nuhHinduGoddess of food and nourishment
Arundhatiuh-RUN-dhah-teeHinduExemplary wife; star in ritual
Ambikaum-BEE-kahHinduMother goddess; form of Durga/Parvati
Alakshmiuh-LUK-shmeeHinduGoddess of misfortune, opposite Lakshmi
Atahensicah-TAH-hen-sikHaudenosaunee (Iroquois)Sky Woman; creation mother
Atabeyah-tah-BAYTaíno (Caribbean)Mother and freshwater goddess
AlaAH-lahIgbo (Nigeria)Earth goddess of fertility and law
Asase Yaaah-SAH-seh YAHAkan (Ghana)Earth goddess of fertility and harvest
Anahitah-nah-HEETArmenianGoddess of fertility, healing, wisdom
Apsaraap-SAH-rahHindu/BuddhistCelestial nymph; dancers of the gods
Anzilian-ZEE-leeHittite/HurrianGoddess of childbirth and women’s rites
AngrbodaANG-rboh-dahNorseJötunn; mother of monstrous children
Alfhildal-FILDNorseLegendary shieldmaiden and heroine
AslaugAHs-lawgNorseLegendary queen of the Völsung line
Austejaow-STAY-yahLithuanianGoddess of bees and beekeeping
Ausrineowsh-REE-nayLithuanianDawn and morning-star goddess
Adrasteiaah-drah-STEE-uhGreekNurse of infant Zeus; justice aspects
AshiAH-sheeZoroastrianGoddess of reward and just recompense
AyaAH-yahMesopotamianDawn goddess; consort of Shamash
AjaAH-jahYorubaSpirit of the forest and markets
Aruruah-ROO-rooSumerianCreator/birth goddess
Alkonostal-kuh-NOstSlavicMythical bird-woman of song and prophecy
AjeAH-jehYorubaGoddess of wealth and commerce
Adrasteia (alternate sp.)ah-drah-STEE-uhGreekInevitability; nurse of Zeus

Descriptions

Aphrodite
Greek goddess of love, desire, and beauty; born of sea foam and central to many myths (Homer; Hesiod).
Athena
Virgin goddess of wisdom, strategy, crafts, and Athens’s patron; sprang from Zeus’s head (Homer; Hesiod).
Artemis
Goddess of the hunt, wilderness, and childbirth; twin sister of Apollo and a virgin goddess (Homer; Hesiod).
Ariadne
Daughter of Minos who aided Theseus in the Labyrinth; later becomes consort of Dionysus (Homeric Hymns; Euripides).
Atalanta
Legendary huntress who joined the Calydonian boar hunt and challenged suitors by footrace (Apollodorus; Ovid).
Alcmene
Mortal queen seduced by Zeus (in disguise), mother of Heracles; central to Heracles’ birth stories (Hesiod; Apollodorus).
Andromache
Hector’s widow, representing Trojan suffering after the war (Homer; Euripides).
Andromeda
Ethiopian princess chained as a sea-monster sacrifice; rescued by Perseus and later wed him (Homer; Ovid).
Antigone
Daughter of Oedipus who defied a king’s order to bury her brother (Sophocles).
Antheia
Minor goddess or epithet linked to flowers and floral festivals; sometimes associated with Hera (Pausanias).
Aegina
Nymph abducted by Zeus, mother of Aeacus; island named after her (Homer; Ovid).
Aegle
Name borne by several nymphs associated with health, radiance, or sunset in Greek myth (Hesiod; Pausanias).
Aglaea
One of the three Charites (Graces), personifying beauty and splendor (Hesiod).
Agave
Daughter of Cadmus who, in a Bacchic frenzy, kills her son Pentheus (Euripides, Bacchae).
Arachne
Mortal weaver who challenged Athena and was transformed into a spider for hubris (Ovid).
Arethusa
Nymph pursued by Alpheus and changed into a freshwater spring (Ovid; Pausanias).
Asteria
Titaness associated with falling stars and prophetic dreams; sister of Leto (Hesiod).
Astraea
Virgin goddess of justice who leaves the corrupt world, later associated with the constellation Virgo (Hesiod).
Amphitrite
Major sea deity and queen of the sea, sometimes counted among Nereids (Homer; Hesiod).
Amalthea
Nymph or goat who nursed Zeus; associated with the cornucopia motif (Hesiod).
Alcyone
One of the Pleiades linked to the Ceyx myth, transformed into a bird after tragic events (Ovid).
Aethra
Daughter of Pittheus and mother of the hero Theseus; connected to Aegean royal lines (Homer; Plutarch).
Admete
Daughter of King Eurystheus, sometimes associated with early Heraclean episodes (Apollodorus).
Althaea
Queen whose actions and the burning log motif determine Meleager’s fate (Apollodorus).
Alcippe
Name borne by several minor mythic women; one involves Ares and a trial (Pausanias).
Ananke
Primordial deity embodying inevitability and compulsion, active in cosmogony (Hesiod).
Aura
Personification of the breeze and a minor nature deity, appears in later epics (Nonnus).
Aurora
Roman personification of dawn who renews the day; parallels Greek Eos (Ovid; Virgil).
Anna Perenna
Ancient Roman goddess of the year and renewal, celebrated with popular festivals in March (Ovid, Fasti).
Amata
Queen of Latium who resists Aeneas’s claim and dies in tragedy (Virgil, Aeneid).
Allecto
Fury who incites vengeance and conflict in mortals (Virgil).
Anat
Canaanite warrior and fertility goddess, sister/ally of Baal (Ugaritic texts).
Astarte
Near Eastern goddess of fertility, sexuality, and war; parallels Ishtar and Aphrodite (Ugaritic; Egyptian texts).
Aset
Egyptian form/name of Isis, goddess of motherhood, magic, and kingship (Pyramid Texts; later sources).
Anuket
Nile goddess worshiped at Elephantine, linked to water and fertility (Herodotus; Egyptian inscriptions).
Amunet
Ancient Egyptian goddess of hiddenness and royal protection in Thebes (Pyramid Texts).
Anput
Female funerary deity associated with embalming rites and tomb practice (Egyptian inscriptions).
Ammut
Monstrous female figure who consumes impure hearts in the afterlife judgment (Book of the Dead).
Anahita
Avestan Iranian goddess of rivers, fertility, and healing with a major cult (Avesta).
Amaterasu
Sun kami who hid in a cave, plunging the world into darkness until lured out (Kojiki; Nihon Shoki).
Ame-no-Uzume
Kami of dance and merriment who enticed Amaterasu from seclusion with comic performance (Kojiki).
Anu
Irish mother goddess of the Tuatha Dé Danann, associated with the land and fertility (Lebor Gabála Érenn).
Aine
Irish sovereignty and summer goddess linked with fertility and local rites (Irish sagas; folklore).
Aoife
Renowned heroine/warrior in medieval Irish tales, appears in multiple sagas (medieval Irish literature).
Airmid
Physician-nymph of the Tuatha Dé Danann associated with medicinal plants and healing lore (Lebor Gabála; folklore).
Anjana
Mother of the monkey-hero Hanuman in the Ramayana tradition, often venerated regionally (Ramayana).
Aditi
Vedic mother goddess, mother of the Adityas and emblem of cosmic order (Rigveda).
Anasuya
Wife of the sage Atri, famed for her purity and miraculous hospitality (Puranas; Mahabharata).
Annapurna
Form of Parvati who provides food and sustenance; worshiped in temples like Varanasi (Puranas).
Arundhati
Wife of sage Vasistha revered for chastity; referenced in marriage rites and star lore (Puranas).
Ambika
Title/name of the Divine Mother in many Puranic contexts; mother-protector figure (Puranas).
Alakshmi
Personification of poverty and misfortune, counterpoint to Lakshmi in Hindu thought (Puranic lore).
Atahensic
Iroquoian Sky Woman who fell to earth and birthed the world in creation myths (Iroquois oral tradition).
Atabey
Taino mother goddess of freshwater and fertility, mother of culture-hero Yúcahu (Taíno lore; colonial chronicles).
Ala
Igbo earth-mother deity associated with morality, land, and fertility in oral tradition.
Asase Yaa
Akan earth-mother revered for agriculture and land fertility (Akan oral sources).
Anahit
Prominent pre-Christian Armenian goddess associated with fertility and healing (Classical Armenian sources).
Apsara
Supernatural dancers in Hindu and Buddhist epics, often linked to clouds, water, and seduction (Mahabharata; Puranas).
Anzili
Hittite/Hurrian goddess invoked in rituals for childbirth and female health (Hittite ritual tablets).
Angrboda
Giantess who bears Fenrir, Jörmungandr, and Hel by Loki; name means “bringer of grief” (Poetic/Prose Edda).
Alfhild
Legendary warrior-woman appearing in Norse sagas and heroic legend (saga literature).
Aslaug
Daughter of Sigurd and Brynhild in saga cycles; later a queen in the Völsung legends (Völsunga saga).
Austeja
Baltic deity protecting bees and hives; part of folk cult and agricultural rites (Lithuanian folklore).
Ausrine
Lithuanian goddess associated with the morning star, dawn, and love (Baltic folklore).
Adrasteia
Cretan nymph who guarded and nursed Zeus; sometimes merged with Nemesis (Hesiod).
Ashi
Avestan concept-deity representing reward, righteousness, and blessedness (Avesta).
Aya
Akkadian/Sumerian dawn goddess and wife/companion of the sun god Shamash (Akkadian hymns).
Aja
In Yoruba tradition, Aja is a forest spirit/goddess associated with herbal knowledge, sometimes wealth (Yoruba oral tradition).
Aruru
Sumerian mother-creator figure who fashions humans and assists in birth (Epic of Gilgamesh; Sumerian myths).
Alkonost
Slavic legendary bird-woman whose song brings forgetfulness or bliss; appears in folklore and byliny.
Aje
Yoruba deity connected to markets, wealth, and traders; venerated in West African tradition (oral sources).
Adrasteia (alternate sp.)
Variant spelling/figure emphasizing the inevitability or inescapability of fate; linked to Cretan upbringing of Zeus (Hesiod).
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