This list includes 19 Mythological girl names that start with J, from “Jael” to “Jyeshtha”. They draw from many traditions and suit parents, writers, and name hunters seeking myth-inspired options.
Mythological girl names that start with J are female names taken from myths, legends, and ancient stories. For example, “Jael” appears in Semitic tradition as a decisive heroine, showing these names often reflect vivid characters.
Below you’ll find the table with Name, Pronunciation, Origin, Meaning / Role, and Usage & Variants.
Name: Lists the name; you can skim for sound, spelling, and familiar forms to compare or shortlist favorites.
Pronunciation: Gives a simple phonetic guide so you can say each name confidently and test how it sounds aloud.
Origin: Shows the culture or mythic tradition behind each name, helping you understand its background and flavor.
Meaning / Role: Summarizes core meaning or mythological role so you see whether a name evokes deity, heroine, or symbolic trait.
Usage & Variants: Notes common modern forms, spelling variants, and brief usage tips so you can consider practicality and uniqueness.
Mythological girl names that start with J
Name
Pronunciation
Origin (Culture/Myth)
Meaning / Role
Juno
JOO-no
Roman
Queen of gods; goddess of marriage
Jord
YORTH / YERTH
Norse
Earth goddess; mother of Thor
Jocasta
joh-KAS-tuh
Greek
Queen of Thebes; Oedipus’ mother and wife
Juturna
joo-TUR-nah
Roman
Goddess of springs, health, and fountains
Jarnsaxa
YARn-SAK-sah
Norse (Jötunn)
Giantess; consort of Thor; mother of Magni
Jengu
JENG-goo
Sawa / Duala (Cameroon)
Water spirit; mermaid-like healer and bringer of fortune
Jingwei
JING-way
Chinese
Daughter-turned-bird who tries to fill the sea
Jambavati
jum-buh-VAH-tee
Hindu
One of Krishna’s wives; daughter of bear-king Jambavan
Jahnavi
juh-NAH-vee
Hindu
Personification of the Ganges River; “daughter of Jahnu”
Jyeshtha
JYE-shthah
Hindu
Goddess of misfortune and inauspiciousness
Jayanti
juh-YUN-tee
Hindu
Daughter of Indra; minor goddess/consort figure
Jahi
JAH-hee
Zoroastrian / Avestan
Demoness of lust and impurity
Jael
JAY-el
Hebrew / Biblical
Heroine who killed the Canaanite general Sisera
Jezebel
JEZ-uh-bel
Hebrew / Biblical
Phoenician queen; antagonist figure in Israelite narrative
Judith
JOOD-ith
Hebrew / Deuterocanonical
Heroine who beheaded Holofernes to save her people
Jemima
juh-MY-muh
Hebrew / Biblical
Daughter of Job; symbol of restored beauty
Jana
JAH-nah
Roman / Italic
Feminine form linked to Janus/Diana; nature deity
Jorogumo
jo-ROH-goo-moh
Japanese (folklore)
Spider-woman yokai who lures men
Jorinde
yor-IN-deh
Germanic / Folktale
Enchanted maiden in Grimm fairy tale
Descriptions
Juno
Roman state goddess, wife of Jupiter and protector of women and matrons; counterpart of Greek Hera. Attested in Livy, Ovid, and Roman cult practice (Matronalia). (Livy, Ovid)
Jord
Old Norse Jǫrð personifying the earth, mother of Thor by Odin; appears in Poetic and Prose Edda. Common English form “Jord”/”Jörð”. (Prose Edda)
Jocasta
Central tragic figure in Sophocles’ Oedipus plays; name appears in Greek mythic genealogies and tragedies. Often Anglicized “Jocasta”. (Sophocles)
Juturna
Roman water deity linked to healing and fresh water; sister of Turnus in Virgil’s Aeneid; worshiped at Roman springs. (Virgil, Ovid)
Jarnsaxa
Name means “iron-sax”; appears in Poetic and Prose Edda as a jötunn and mother of Thor’s son Magni. Variant Iárnsaxa. (Prose Edda)
Jengu
Spirit-entities of the Sawa coastal peoples; venerated in rituals, invoked for healing and luck. Known from ethnography and oral tradition. (Cameroonian oral tradition)
Jingwei
In Chinese myth a drowned girl becomes a bird (Jingwei) that endlessly fills the ocean with twigs and stones; attested in Shanhaijing and folklore. (Shanhaijing, folklore)
Jambavati
Prominent figure in Bhagavata Purana and Mahabharata as Krishna’s wife; mother of Samba; appears in Puranic narratives. (Bhagavata Purana, Mahabharata)
Jahnavi
Epithet of the goddess Ganga, called Jahnavi after sage Jahnu; used in Puranas and devotional literature. (Puranas)
Jyeshtha
Also spelled Jyeṣṭhā or Jyeshtha; a Puranic deity representing elder/inauspicious aspects, counterpart or sister-figure to Lakshmi in some texts. (Puranas)
Jayanti
In Puranic and epic tales Jayanti appears as Indra’s daughter, sometimes bride in celestial marriages; minor mythic figure with regional tales. (Puranas, Mahabharata)
Jahi
Avestan demoness (Jahi, Jeh) who embodies sexual corruption and tempts humanity; appears in Avesta and later Zoroastrian writings. (Avesta)
Jael
In Judges, Jael drives a tent peg through Sisera’s head, celebrated as Israel’s deliverer; prominent Old Testament heroine. (Book of Judges)
Jezebel
Wife of Ahab, notorious in 1 Kings for promoting Baal worship; later literary and folkloric symbol of wickedness. (1 Kings)
Judith
Protagonist of the Book of Judith (deuterocanonical); celebrated in art and literature as a deliverer and clever heroine. (Book of Judith)
Jemima
One of Job’s three daughters born after his trials; name appears in Book of Job and later literature. (Book of Job)
Jana
Attested in Roman and Sabine contexts as a feminine counterpart to Janus or local goddess; appears in Ovid and inscriptions. (Ovid, inscriptions)
Jorogumo
Folkloric yokai that can transform into a seductive woman; appears in Japanese tales and kabuki stories. (Japanese folktales)
Jorinde
Title character of Grimm’s “Jorinde and Joringel”; a young woman turned into a nightingale by an evil witch in folk literature. (Grimm’s Fairy Tales)
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