This list includes 42 Mythological girl names that start with T, from “Tailtiu” to “Tyche”. They include goddesses, heroines, and legendary figures from Celtic, Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Hindu, and other traditions.
Mythological girl names that start with T are given names drawn from myths and legends across many cultures. One notable example is Tyche, the Greek personification of fortune and chance.
Below you’ll find the table with Name, Origin, Pronunciation, Meaning/Role, Usage & Variants, and Notes.
Name: The mythological name as commonly used in English, with alternative spellings shown when they are relevant.
Origin: The culture or mythic tradition where the name appears, helping you see its cultural background.
Pronunciation: A simple phonetic guide so you can say the name correctly in everyday use.
Meaning/Role: A concise definition or the character’s mythological role, useful for meaning-driven name choices.
Usage & Variants: Notes on modern popularity, common diminutives, and related names you might consider.
Notes: Short citations, myth context, or cross-links to related names and spelling variants for further exploration.
Mythological girl names that start with T
Name
Origin/Culture
Pronunciation
Meaning/Role
Theia
Greek
THEE-ə
Titaness of sight and heavenly light
Themis
Greek
THEE-mis
Titaness of law and order
Tethys
Greek
TEH-this
Titaness of the sea and rivers
Thalassa
Greek
thah-LASS-ə
Personification of the sea
Thetis
Greek
THEE-tis
Sea nymph (Nereid), mother of Achilles
Thalia
Greek
THAHL-ee-ə
Muse of comedy / a Grace
Terpsichore
Greek
terp-SIH-koh-ree
Muse of dance and chorus
Tisiphone
Greek
tis-ih-FONE
Fury (Erinys)
Taygete
Greek
TAY-jeet
Pleiad nymph
Telesto
Greek
teh-LESS-toh
Nereid (sea nymph)
Thelxinoe
Greek
thel-ksih-NOH-ee
Minor nymph or muse figure
Thoosa
Greek
THOH-sə
Sea nymph
Thisbe
Greco‑Roman
THIS-bee
Tragic lover
Tyche
Greek
TY-kee
Goddess of fortune and luck
Tiamat
Mesopotamian
tee-AM-at
Primordial sea goddess and chaos dragon
Tashmetu
Mesopotamian
TASH-meh-toom
Goddess of prayer and intercession
Tonantzin
Nahuatl
toh-nahn-TSEEN
Our Revered Mother (mother goddess)
Tlazolteotl
Aztec/Nahua
tlah-SOL-teh-otl
Goddess of sin, filth and purification
Tlaltecuhtli
Aztec
tlal-teh-KOOT-lee
Primordial earth deity (often female)
Toci
Aztec
TOH-see
Our Grandmother; earth and healing goddess
Tanit
Phoenician/Carthaginian
TAH-nit
Mother and fertility goddess
Tefnut
Egyptian
TEF-noot
Goddess of moisture, dew and rain
Taweret
Egyptian
tah-WEH-ret
Protective hippopotamus goddess of childbirth
Tenenet
Egyptian
TEN-eh-net
Goddess of childbirth and brewing
Terra
Roman
TER-uh
Earth goddess; personification of the earth
Turan
Etruscan
TOO-ran
Goddess of love and vitality
Thrud (Thrúðr)
Norse
THROOD
Daughter of Thor; goddess of strength
Thorgerd (Þorgerðr)
Norse
thor-GERD
Protective local goddess / cult figure
Thyone
Greek
THY-oh-nee
Deified Semele; Dionysian figure
Toyotama-hime
Japanese
toy-oh-TAH-ma HEE-meh
Sea-princess and ancestral mother
Tamayori-hime
Japanese
tah-mah-YOH-ree HEE-meh
Ancestral priestess and mother
Tamamo-no-Mae
Japanese
tah-MAH-moh no MAY
Legendary fox-spirit courtesan
Tala
Philippine (Tagalog)
TAH-lah
Moon and star goddess
Tailtiu
Irish
TAL-tee-oo
Foster-mother/harvest goddess
Tlachtga
Irish
TLAHKH-tcha-ga
Sorceress associated with a ritual hill
Telphousa
Greek
tel-FYOO-sə
Naiad fountain-nymph
Theophane
Greek
thee-oh-FAY-nee
Nymph transformed into a ram
Trijata
Hindu
tree-JAH-tah
Rakshasi (demoness) and ally
Tara
Hindu/Buddhist
TAH-rah
Goddess/bodhisattva of compassion and protection
Tripura Sundari
Hindu
TREE-poo-rah sun-DAH-ree
Shakta goddess of beauty and supreme reality
Tapati
Hindu
TAH-pah-tee
River goddess
Tulsi
Hindu
TOOL-see
Personified sacred basil; devotional figure
Descriptions
Theia
Titaness associated with sight and shining things; mother of Helios, Selene, and Eos (Hesiod).
Themis
Personification of divine law, custom and prophecy; mother of the Fates and oracles (Hesiod).
Tethys
Wife of Oceanus and mother of Oceanids and river gods in Hesiodic genealogies (Hesiod).
Thalassa
Word-goddess of the sea appearing in later epic and hymn traditions (Homeric Hymns).
Thetis
Prominent Nereid who protects Achilles and intervenes with gods (Homer; The Iliad).
Thalia
Name of the Muse of comedy and also one of the three Graces in classical lists (Hesiod).
Terpsichore
Muse inspiring dance, lyric poetry and choral song (Hesiod).
Tisiphone
One of the three Furies who punish murder and dreadful crimes (Hesiod; Aeschylus).
Taygete
One of the Pleiades; associated with Artemis and the mountain Taygetus (Hesiod).
Telesto
Minor sea nymph associated with success and fulfillment (Homeric Hymns; scholia).
Thelxinoe
Name appears among obscure nymphs/muse-like figures in Hellenic mythic lists (Hesiod; scholiasts).
Thoosa
Nereid or sea-nymph mother of the Cyclops Polyphemus by Poseidon (Homer).
Thisbe
Heroine of the Pyramus and Thisbe tale, a tragic Babylonian couple popularized by Ovid (Ovid, Metamorphoses).
Tyche
Personification of fortune and civic prosperity; Roman analogue is Fortuna (Pausanias).
Tiamat
Babylonian mother-goddess of the salt sea; slain by Marduk to form the world (Enuma Elish).
Tashmetu
Akkadian/Babylonian goddess who listens to and grants prayers; wife of Nabu (cuneiform inscriptions).
Tonantzin
Honorific title for earth/mother goddesses in central Mexico; later syncretized with Guadalupe (Aztec sources).
Tlazolteotl
Receives confessions and purifies moral pollution; linked to fertility and midwifery (Florentine Codex).
Tlaltecuhtli
Monstrous earth-goddess whose body becomes the earth in Aztec cosmogony (Florentine Codex).
Toci
Title/synonym of Tonantzin, associated with childbirth, healing and earth (Codex Mendoza).
Tanit
Chief Carthaginian goddess linked to fertility and state cults; often shown with disk and crescent (Punic inscriptions).
Tefnut
Daughter of Atum; mother of Nut and Geb; associated with moisture and order (Pyramid Texts).
Taweret
Household protector of mothers and infants, often depicted as composite hippo (Book of the Dead).
Tenenet
Minor protective goddess invoked in birth rites and domestic cults (Egyptian temple texts).
Terra
Roman counterpart to Greek Gaia; worshipped in agricultural and state rites (Varro; Ovid).
Turan
Etruscan love-deity comparable to Aphrodite/Venus in Etruscan inscriptions and art (Etruscan sources).
Thrud (Thrúðr)
Daughter of Thor, name meaning “strength”; referenced in Poetic and Prose Edda (Snorri).
Thorgerd (Þorgerðr)
Powerful cult figure in Orkney and saga literature, invoked for protection in battle (Orkneyinga saga).
Thyone
Name assumed by Semele after deification; associated with Dionysian rites (Nonnus; later mythographers).
Toyotama-hime
Daughter of a sea deity who becomes an ancestor in the Kojiki traditions (Kojiki).
Tamayori-hime
Divine mother/priestess who nurtures imperial ancestors in early Japanese myth (Kojiki).
Tamamo-no-Mae
Infamous nine-tailed fox in Heian-era tales who impersonates a courtesan and brings calamity (medieval chronicles).
Tala
Tagalog goddess of the stars and the moon in Philippine folk astronomy and oral tradition (Philippine oral sources).
Tailtiu
Foster-mother of Lugh; credited with clearing plains for agriculture and linked to Tailteann festival (Lebor Gabála Érenn).
Tlachtga
Daughter of Mug Ruith; powerful druidess tied to Samhain rituals and a named ritual mound (Medieval Irish saga).
Telphousa
Spring or prophetic nymph who interacts with Apollo and lends her name to a sacred spring (Pausanias).
Theophane
Loved by Poseidon; transformed to avoid suitors and becomes ancestor of magical ram (Ovid).
Trijata
A rakshasi in the Ramayana who consoles Sita during her captivity (Valmiki Ramayana).
Tara
In Hinduism a Mahavidya; in Buddhism a major bodhisattva/goddess offering protection and compassion (Puranas; sūtras).
Tripura Sundari
A principal Goddess in Sri Vidya tradition, embodiment of beauty and supreme power (Tantric texts).
Tapati
Daughter of Surya (Sun) and Chhaya; personifies the Tapati river and appears in epic tales (Mahabharata).
Tulsi
Sacred plant personified as a goddess, closely associated with Vishnu worship and domestic rites (Skanda Purana).
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