This list includes 31 Mythological girl names that start with G, from “Gabija” to “Gwendolen”. Many names here come from diverse mythic traditions and suit parents, writers, and name-hunters.
Mythological girl names that start with G are female names drawn from myths and legends whose initial letter is G. Many denote goddesses or heroines like “Gaia”, linking name, role, and cultural story.
Below you’ll find the table with Name, Pronunciation, Origin, Meaning / Mythological Role, Modern Variants, Usage & Notes, and Sources.
Name: Shows the name as it commonly appears, so you can scan and pick favorites quickly.
Pronunciation: Gives a simple phonetic guide so you say each name correctly and avoid awkward guesses.
Origin: Lists the cultural or mythic tradition so you understand the name’s historical and geographic roots.
Meaning / Mythological Role: Summarizes the name’s literal meaning or the mythic figure’s role to add narrative resonance to your choice.
Modern Variants: Notes contemporary spellings and related forms so you find softer or more familiar alternatives easily.
Usage & Notes: Provides brief notes on rarity, historical use, or cultural sensitivities to inform your selection.
Sources: Lists the references used for each entry so you can follow up or check details quickly.
Mythological girl names that start with G
Name
Pronunciation
Origin/Culture
Meaning/Role
Gaia
GAY-uh
Greek
Primordial earth goddess
Galatea
gal-uh-TEE-uh
Greek
Nereid / beloved statue
Galene
ga-LEE-nee
Greek
Nereid of calm seas
Glauce
GLAW-see
Greek
Tragic princess / sea-nymph
Gorgophone
GOR-goh-FOH-nee
Greek
Daughter of Perseus; early queen
Geshtinanna
gesh-tee-NAH-nah
Sumerian
Goddess of dreams and fertility
Gula
GOO-lah
Mesopotamian
Goddess of healing
Gersemi
GER-seh-mee
Norse
Daughter of Freyja; “treasure”
Gerd
GERD
Norse
Jötunn; wife of Freyr
Gefjun
GEF-yun
Norse
Plow-goddess who made Zealand
Gna
GNAH
Norse
Messenger-goddess of Frigg
Groa
GROH-ah
Norse
Seeress / protective sorceress
Gullveig
GULL-vayg
Norse
Figure linked to gold and the Vanir–Aesir strife
Gunnr
GUNR
Norse
Valkyrie; “war”
Gunnlod
GUNN-lod
Norse
Giantess who guards the mead of poetry
Gondul
GON-dool
Norse
Valkyrie appearing in Eddic poetry
Gudrun
GUD-roon
Norse/Germanic
Saga heroine; tragic figure
Grimhild
GRIM-hild
Norse/Germanic
Scheming queen in heroic sagas
Gunnhild
GUN-hild
Norse
Legendary queen / saga figure
Grainne
GRAWN-yuh
Irish
Princess who elopes with Diarmuid
Guinevere
GWIN-eh-veer
Arthurian/Welsh
Arthur’s queen; love/treachery theme
Gwendolen
gwen-DOH-len
Welsh/British
Legendary British queen
Gobnait
GOB-nit
Irish
Saint/folk-healer linked to bees
Grian
GREE-an
Irish
Goddess/personification of the sun or brightness
Giltine
GIL-tee-nay
Lithuanian
Goddess of death
Gabija
ga-BEE-ya
Lithuanian
Goddess of hearth and fire
Ganga
GAHNG-gah
Hindu
River goddess of the Ganges
Gayatri
GAY-uh-tree
Hindu
Personified Vedic hymn; protective goddess
Gauri
GOW-ree
Hindu
Aspect of Parvati; “fair one”
Gordafarid
gor-dah-fah-REED
Persian
Heroic warrior maiden in epic
Gesine? OMITTED intentionally
Descriptions
Gaia
Primordial Earth deity who births Titans and gods; central in Hesiod’s Theogony. Variant Gaea; widely used in modern naming (Hesiod).
Galatea
Name of a Nereid and Ovid’s statue-loved maiden in Pygmalion story; literary favorite for romantic connotations (Ovid, Metamorphoses).
Galene
One of the Nereids representing calm seas in Greek sources; minor sea-nymph epithet used in classical lists (Hesiod).
Glauce
Several mythic women named Glauce (e.g., Creon’s daughter), tied to poison-robe tales and tragic marriages (Euripides, Seneca).
Gorgophone
Perseus’ daughter who married twice and founded dynasties; appears in Apollodorus and mythic genealogies.
Geshtinanna
Sumerian sister of Dumuzi, associated with dreams, agriculture, and the underworld in Sumerian myths and hymns.
Gula
Major Babylonian/Assyrian healing goddess (also Nintinugga); invoked in medical texts and temple cults.
Gersemi
Named daughter of Freyja in Old Norse poetry; name means “treasure” and appears in skaldic kennings.
Gerd
Gerðr (Gerd) is the jötunn wooed by Freyr in Skírnismál; central to myths of fertility and union (Poetic Edda).
Gefjun
Norse goddess who ploughed away land to create the Danish island Zealand; attested in the Prose Edda and skaldic verse.
Gna
Minor Norse goddess who runs errands for Frigg in the Prose Edda; name tied to movement and service.
Groa
Gróa is a völva who aids heroes with charms and spells; appears in sagas and Eddic poems as a healer and seer.
Gullveig
Mysterious woman associated with gold whose mistreatment sparks the Æsir–Vanir conflict; mentioned in Poetic Edda.
Gunnr
One of the valkyries in Eddic lists; name also used poetically for battle and appears across Old Norse sources.
Gunnlod
Gunnlöð guards the mead Odin seeks; she and Odin’s encounter explains the origin of poetic inspiration (Prose Edda).
Gondul
Göndul (Gondul) is a named valkyrie in Poetic Edda poems and sagas, linked to warriors’ fates and battle lore.
Gudrun
Central female figure in the Völsunga cycle and the Nibelungenlied; themes include loss, revenge, and endurance in Germanic myth.
Grimhild
Grímhild appears in the Völsunga saga and related legends as a queen plotting marriages and vengeance; source for tragic saga motifs.
Gunnhild
Powerful queen in Norse saga tradition (e.g., Heimskringla), sometimes portrayed with prophetic or witch-like traits in legend.
Grainne
Major heroine of the Fenian Cycle who elopes with warrior Diarmuid; story of love and pursuit in Irish myth (Fenian Cycle).
Guinevere
Gwenhwyfar in Welsh tradition; central to Arthurian legend with motifs of love, betrayal, and courtly romance (Chrétien, Geoffrey).
Gwendolen
Appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth and Welsh tradition as a legendary queen; used in later medieval and literary sources.
Gobnait
Saint and local patron of Ballyvourney, with hagiography mixing Christian and pre-Christian healing and bee lore (Irish hagiographies).
Grian
Name meaning “sun” or “brightness” in Irish lore; appears in Munster folklore and place-name traditions.
Giltine
Giltinė personifies death in Lithuanian folklore, guiding souls and appearing in Baltic myth collections and ethnography.
Gabija
Domestic hearth goddess in Baltic folklore; invoked to protect the home fire and family prosperity (Lithuanian ethnography).
Ganga
Personified sacred river who descends from heaven to purify souls; central in Vedas and Puranic narratives (Rigveda, Puranas).
Gayatri
Personification of the Gayatri metre and mantra; later worshipped as Gayatri Devi in devotional traditions (Rigvedic/Puranic).
Gauri
Gauri is an epithet/aspect of Parvati meaning “fair”; worshipped in folk and classical Puranic contexts as benign goddess.
Gordafarid
A brave female warrior in Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh who fights for her people; emblematic of Iranian heroic poetry (Shahnameh).
Gesine? OMITTED intentionally
If you think there is a missing term, let us know using the contact form.