Here is a list of some of the most common pagan Goddess names.

Akhilandeshvari – Hindu Goddess Never-Not-Broken

Amaterasu – Japanese sun Goddess

Annapurna – Hindu Goddess of Food and Nourishment

Aphrodite /Venus – Greek Goddess of love and beauty

Artemis/Diana – Greek/Roman Goddess of the hunt, virginity, and childbirth, twin sister of Apollo, and an Olympian, often associated with the moon

Astarte – Greek Goddess of fertility, sexuality, and war

Athena – Greek Goddess of wisdom, defensive and strategic wars

Bast – Egyptian solar and war Goddess (in the form of a cat)

Baubo – Greek Goddess of mirth, jests, and bawdy humour

Brighid – Celtic Goddess of poetry, healing, and crafts (especially smith-work), holy wells and eternal flames

Cerridwen – Celtic Goddess of transformation, of the cauldron of inspiration, of prophecy

Cybele – Greek Earth Mother

Danu – Irish Mother Goddess

Demeter – Greek Goddess of the harvest and of grain, mother of Persephone

Durga – Hindu Great Goddess, Divine Mother

Eos – Greek Goddess of the dawn

Ereshkigal – Mesopotamian Goddess of Darkness, Death, and Gloom

Flora – Roman Goddess of flowers

Fortuna – Roman Goddess of fortune

Freya or Freyja – Norse Goddess of fertility, sexual liberty, abundance, and war

Frigg – Norse Goddess of marriage, household management, and love, Queen of Heaven, and wife of Odin

Gaia/Earth Mother – The Greek Goddess Gaia is the primordial Goddess of earth, mother and grandmother of the first generation of Titans

Hathor – Egyptian Goddess of the Milky Way, Mother Goddess, Goddess of childbirth and death.

Hecate – Greek Goddess of witchcraft and magick, crossroads, and the harvest moon

Hestia – Greek Goddess of the hearth and domestic life

Hel – Norse Goddess daughter of Loki and the giantess Angrboda, Queen of the Dead

Hera – Roman Goddess of the Hearth, of women, and of marriage

Inanna – Sumerian Goddess of sexual love, fertility, and warfare

Isis – Egyptian Mother Goddess, matron of nature and magick, Goddess of creativity and the underdog

Ishtar – Mesopotamian Goddess of sexual love, fertility, and war

Juno – Roman Queen of the Gods and Goddess of matrimony

Kali – Hindu Goddess of Time and Death, slayer of demons, protectress (As Kali Ma: Divine Mother Goddess)

Kore – Greek Maiden Goddess of bountiful Earth (See also Persephone)

Kuan Yin , Kwan Yin Ma , Quan Yin – Chinese Goddess of Mercy and Compassion

Lakshmi – Hindu Goddess of Wealth and Fertility (Goddess as Mother/Sustainer)

Lalita – Hindu Goddess of Beauty

Luna – Roman Goddess of the Moon

Ma’at – Egyptian Goddess, personified concept of truth, balance, justice, and order

Mary – Mother Goddess, Queen of Heaven, Goddess of Femininity

Maya – Hindu Goddess of Illusion and Mystery

Minerva – Roman Goddess of wisdom and war

Morrigan – Celtic war Goddess

Nut – Egyptian Goddess of heaven and the sky and all celestial bodies

Parvati – Hindu Divine Mother, the embodiment of the total energy in the universe, Goddess of Power and Might

Pele – Hawai’ian volcano Goddess, Destroyer and Creatrix

Persephone – Greek Goddess daughter of Demeter, Queen of the Underworld, also a grain-Goddess, Maiden Goddess

Radha – Hindu Divine Mother

Rhiannon – Celtic Goddess of the moon

Rosmurta – Celtic/Roman Goddess of abundance. She is also the Goddess of Business Success.

Saraswati – Hindu Goddess of Knowledge, the Arts, Mathematics, Education, and cosmic Wisdom (Creatrix)

Sedna – Inuit Goddess of the Sea and Queen of the Underworld

Selene – Greek Goddess of Moon

Shakti – Hindu primordial cosmic energy, Great Divine Mother

Shekina – Hebrew Goddess of compassion in its purest form (feminine aspect of God)

Sita – Hindu Goddess representing perfect womanhood

Sol – Norse Sun Goddess

Sophia – Greek Goddess of wisdom

Spider Woman – Teotihuacan Great Goddess (Creatrix)

Tara – Hindu, Mother Goddess, the absolute, unquenchable hunger that propels all life.

Tara, Green – Buddhist female Buddha, Tibetan Buddhism – compassion, liberation, success. Compassionate Buddha of enlightened activity

Tara, White – Buddhist Goddess known for compassion, long life, healing and serenity; also known as The Wish-fulfilling Wheel, or Cintachakra

Tara, Red – fierceness, magnetizing all good things

Tara, Black – power

Tara, Yellow – wealth and prosperity

Tara, Blue – transmutation of anger

Tiamat – Mesopotamian dragon Goddess, embodiment of primordial chaos (the Velvet Dark)

Uma – Hindu Goddess of power, the personification of light and beauty, embodying great beauty and divine wisdom

Vesta – Roman Goddess of the hearth

Voluptas – Roman Goddess of pleasure

Yemaya – Yoruban Mother Goddess, Goddess of the Ocean

White Buffalo Calf Woman – Lakota Goddess


 

Goddess Titles

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Many times you’ll hear these used as names of Wiccan Goddesses, but accurately speaking they are more like titles that can be used for multiple Wiccan Goddesses.

 

Crone Goddess – Title used for Wiccan Goddesses of death, rebirth, and wisdom, such as Cerridwen, and Hecate. Signifying wisdom, mystery, the Gates between the Worlds, etc.

Earth Goddess – Title used for embodiments of the Earth, such as Greek Goddess Gaia, Demeter, Cybele.

Great Mother Goddess – Creatrix existing in most religions, under various names such as Demeter, Gaia, Isis, Parvati (also Great Goddess, Great Mother, Divine Mother).

Moon Goddess – Title used for Goddesses of the Moon, such as Luna, Selene, and Artemis.

Mother Goddess – Title used for the bountiful embodiment of the Earth (see Earth Goddess). Signifying life, procreation, fecundity, abundance, etc.

Maiden Goddess – Title used for Goddesses who personify the youthful energy of spring, such as Kore, Diana (also Virgin Goddess)

Queen of Heaven – Title used for Virgin Mary, Asherah, and possibly other Great Mother Goddesses

Queen of the Underworld – Title used for Ereshkigal, Persephone, and possibly other Death Goddesses

Star Goddess – Primary Goddess, Creatix of All

Triple Goddess – Worshipped since the 7th millennium BC as the Goddess in three aspects—as a young woman, a birth-giving matron, and an old woman (Maiden-Mother-Crone). Passed down through the ages into virtually all religions:

·         Parvati-Durga-Uma (Kali) in India

·         Ana-Babd-Macha (the Morrigan), and Brighid in Ireland

·         Hebe-Hera-Hecate, the three Moerae, the three Gorgons, the three Graeae, and the three Horae in Greece

·         the Fates or Fortunae in Romans

·         the Norns to the Vikings

·         Diana Triformis to the druids

Virgin Goddess – Title used for Goddesses who are solitary, choosing to stand alone, without consorts. Signifying Spring, beginnings, innocence, purity, etc. See also Maiden Goddess.