#but so many people forget that aphrodite is technically a goddess of war too
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achespink · 7 months ago
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cackling loudly to myself knowing that nayeli is genuinely a sweetheart and she hates harming people but if she has to . . she will, and that’s a promise. she loves protecting her friends, her family, her loved ones, and she becomes the most dangerous person to come across if she ever finds out you did something to harm someone she cares about . .
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voids-ideas · 1 year ago
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If Nikolai Lantsov were a demigod, he would be a son of Hermes
I have reasons. I have a lot of reasons. Hear me out
Hermes is a jack of all trades. We know that. Nikolai is too, he has many of Hermes' most memorable skills and he is also described in those words. Good in everything
He was a pirate: Do I need to explain this? Nothing is more Hermes than pirates
Sorry, privateer: No one would be as interested in a technicality like this without being a son of Hermes
Eloquent: He can convince you that the sky is pink. He can make you believe many things. Hermes is the god who convinces other gods that he didn't steal anything. And we know that he obviously did
Clever: When Hermes steals Apollo's herd of cows, he does two things to mitigate the consequences: Give as an offering a certain part of the herd to the gods. Create the lyre and show it to Apollo, knowing that Apollo would want it and would forget that Hermes had stolen if he gave him the lyre. Nikolai has the same tendency to trade to get what he wants
The ability to act, Alina said if it was as if they were different people. That is, pure and utter Hermes. Yes, I know Dionysus is the god of theater, but Hermes is much more tied to language. Sometimes Hermes is associated with the creation of language
Nikolai is manipulative, we know that. Hermes is the most manipulative god you can find in the whole Olympus
Design and invention skills: I already said it, Hermes invented the lyre. He also invented more things. He is not Athena or Hephaestus, but he has the third place. We know all the things that Nikolai invented
His social skills are impressive, and Hermes is, again, one of the most sociable gods on Olympus
Hermes is the god who talked someone to sleep so he could steal from them. You can't tell me Nikolai doesn't give off that same energy
Hermes is not a god directly associated with war, but he is agile, athletic. His sons may not be the best with weapons, but they are likely to be quick learners. Nikolai is good with swords, guns... everything
Hermes also has everything to do with exploring, traveling. Nikolai has that part as well
Hermes is also associated with orientation and, in part, with astrology and astronomy. From that can be drawn skills such as pilot
The ruler part, I know that the king of the gods is Zeus. But after him, who are the next in the ruler aura? Hades, obviously. Athena... and Hermes, just because he can convince you that he's the best for the job
In which cabin would you place someone who saw Zoya and said "I give you my crown"? Obviously Hermes. (I know there were more things that influenced here, but you can't tell me I'm 100% wrong.)
His whole relationship with Zoya screams Hermes to me. Are you really going to tell me you don't see that as the way to flirt in Hermes?
Nothing screams more Hermes than a: I give you everything I have and also what I don't have
Aphrodite is the goddess of love, seduction and all that, but there are other gods that have less influence on that, from a point of "masculinity" Apollo, obviously. And you guessed it, Hermes
This is the most Hermes you can read, and it's not Hermes, it's Nikolai:
"Lving by his own rules"
In the wiki, someone wrote: "using ten words when two would have sufficed."
I know I have more. But this is all I can think of
I know he would fit in Athena, or Apollo, or other cabins. But nothing represents Hermes more than him. In my opinion, he is the most Hermes you can find
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swisssadge · 4 years ago
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Illogicalities in Saint Seiya
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Prepare for a longish post. n.n
But I guess I just need to get this out. Because some of these are just so god-awful frustrating.As much as I love Saint Seiya - some blaring logic mistakes just HURT. And it hurts because the original series could have been so much more if so incredibly much potential hadn’t been wasted. Not every bad writing or mistake is because it is a child of its time (80s anime and their damsels in distres *glances at Saori*). 
So, as you’ll unsurprisingly notice, most points are from the original series. Because the spin-offs don’t suffer from the same amount of logic mistakes and do quite a lot things waaay better. And should I find even more things during a rewatch - prepare for part 2. n.n I hope to hear your opinion on what I wrote, and whether you agree or not.
-        What is wrong with the people in Sanctuary? There are two instances I can remember right now: How totally racist they are in the classic saga, and how mean they were the Sisyphus in the gaiden, blaming him to only have received the Sagittarius Cloth because of his brother Ilias’s state as a hero. In the classic saga, I can kinda understand because Saga is at the helm. But in Lost Canvas, Sage is Pope. Why did any of the higher-ups allow such mean people enter the service and Sanctuary of Athena – goddess of wisdom and justice? WHY?! I mean, yeah, the soldiers and Saints are just humans, and humans make mistakes, but come on. They should be at least better than that. Else, I don’t think they deserve to even be in Sanctuary.
-        So, the ages… Saint Seiya really got a problem with those. Firstly, 10-year old Shura doesn’t look like 10-year old Shura in that flashback of his fight against Aiolos. Next, I have checked Marin’s age; she’s supposed to be 16 at the beginnig of the series. And she trained Seiya for 6 years…? Dammit, she does look even close to 10 in that flashback when Seiya was brought to her! Besides, she never has the air of a 16-year old in the entire series. And who in their right mind would make a 10-year old teacher to anybody? Then, even though I don’t like it, I have to mention the Crystal Saint. So, Camus is 20 in the anime. Firstly, the Crystal Saint looks so old, that he probably had been older than Camus when he had been his student. Shame we don’t have confirmation of his age. Anyways, I guess Camus must have been thirteen to fifteen at least when teaching him. Geez… what the hell is it with young kids teaching even younger kids? No wonder Sanctuary was crumbling.
-        Remember that episode in which the new gruesome training is shown, where people even die? It really questions the Gold Saints‘ intelligence, if they by then don’t wonder if something might be wrong in Sanctuary. And they don’t. It needs the real Athena and five Bronze Saints to open their eyes. -.- Who's high and mighty now, Shaka?
-        I really can’t believe none of the Bronze Saints knew of the existence of the Gold Saints. After all, Hyoga (yes, I ignore anime-only Crystal Saint, who may be a chill guy but who only complicates matters and throws logic out the window) and Shiryu were trained by two of them. I can’t imagine their teachers not telling them. Plus, Seiya trained in Sanctuary itself. He’s bound to know, especially considering his friendship with Aiolia. And even worse, do you remember that one or two instances in the anime in which is hinted not even the Gold Saints themselves knew of each other’s existence? How fake Pope Saga acts all surprised and stating in an asking tone that Aiolia is a Gold Saint. And all while freaking Milo is kneeling in front of him in his Gold Cloth. And even Milo acts surprised after the rest of the Gold Cloths are revealed. HOW??? Yeah, thanks for nothing, anime. At least the manga and the new Episode Zero confirm that the twelve Gold Saints grew up together and that they all earned their Cloths prior to Aiolos‘ death.
-        Seika and Marin. Seiya’s sister and mentor. There are some issues I have with how several people seemed to suspect Marin being really Seika. Firstly. When would Seika have had the time to become a fully-fledged Silver Saint? She wasn’t even training back in the Kido mansion. Plus, she was still at the Kido mansion the day Seiya was taken to Greece. Remember that scene where she runs after the car taking him away. Oh, not to forget that Seika apparently vanished ONE WHOLE YEAR after Seiya left for Greece. And Marin is already a Silver Saint by the time he arrives there. Seika would have needed to have been in two places at the same time. Also, if Seika was in Rodorio village the entire time: Shouldn’t Seiya have encountered her by chance in the course of several years? I can’t imagine she stayed inside all the time.
-        Uhm, in the Asgard arc, Shiryu got buried by the same avalanche as Fenrir. So why did Fenrir die and Shiryu not? Shiryu even was beaten up by his fight with Fenrir, while Fenrir didn’t even have a scratch!
-        Um… in Omega… why are there already children of five to seven years training WITH CLOTHS??? I don’t get it. I seriously don’t get it. Where did they get those Cloths from? I mean, I can understand Ryuho, having inherited it from his father Shiryu. But the others? That Lynx Saint friend of Ryuho’s? And weren’t there a little Yuna and a little Soma too – in their Cloths? WHERE THE HELL DID THEY GET THEM FROM??? I seriously cannot imagine any child already earning a Cloth! Seiya had to defeat ten opponents to get his (and was about thirteen at the time). Sisyphus had to land at least one blow against Lugonis wearing the Pisces Cloth, as was probably fifteen-ish to seventeen-ish at that time. So why are suddenly children running around in Cloths?! Isn’t it enough that it is already claimed that the Classic Gold Saints became Saints around the age of 7? Sheesh. I like the idea Teshirogi brought in Lost Canvas far more. Sisyphus was about fourteen or fifteen, maybe sixteen by the time he fought Lugonis for his Gold Cloth. And he was the first, meaning that Aspros and Hasgard were even a little older when they got their Cloths. I don’t get it… I simply don’t get it. Well, at least, in the flashback of his training with Aiolos, Aiolia didn’t seem to have earned the Leo Cloth, and he seems to be six to eight years old back then. Though, duh, it contradicts official statements.
-        While writing a fanfic, a strange notion occured to me… Seiya and Cassios were both living with their masters, Marin and Shaina, right? And female Saints are required to never show their faces to any male, right? So… how the hell did they eat? I mean, didn’t they eat together? Because to eat, Marin and Shaina would have to put away their masks. Did they eat first or did they wait until their students had finished? But even so, the cabin’s are small… Seiya and Cassios would have had to look away the entire time their masters were having their meal. Gee… I don’t get it at all. What a shitty image that they shouldn’t eat together. I mean, they do have a bond as masters and students. And eating is part of the package, especially if said master and student live in the same cabin.
-        So, in the manga all of the bronze boys are siblings, sons of Mitsumasa Kido. That would mean, Seika is his daughter too. And we know that Kido fathered all those children so that Athena would have Saints at her side. My question: Why did Seika never train? Her being a girl is no excuse to me, because, well, Shaina and Marin. Unless Mitsumasa couldn't bring himself to send girls too. Still… with one hundred children, there are bound to be girls too. And if only the boys were sent, then they used that number rather loosely. Because then there wouldn't have been 100 children attempting to earn Cloths, but perhaps like what, 90, 80, maybe even only 70 or 60? Unless he fathered waaaay more than 100 children and kept going until he had 100 boys. Which would be, frankly, disturbing.
-        So, why did Aiolos have to fight any of the normal guards of Sanctuary in the first place? Gold Saints are said to move at the speed of light. And that speed should not be hindered by the barrier over Sanctuary, which only prevents teleportation. So, technically, shouldn't Aiolos have been even well out of Sanctuary before the other Gold Saints had even been alerted?
-        So, how did Aphrodite and Shura in Episode Zero already know Aiolos was a traitor? None of the guards could have been able to reach Pisces or Capricorn before Aiolos. Deathmask I do understand – after all, Aiolos had to go through Aphrodite, Shura, and had to patch himself up in Sagittarius. But Aphrodite and Shura? It would make sense if Saga had sent a telepathic message, but: 1., wouldn't that have given his identity away? And 2.: We never see him doing it, only dispatch some guards. So to me, he never did it in the first place.
-        We learn from several sources, the latest one being Episode Zero, that Saga was sent on a mission to keep an eye on Poseidon and his activities. That he kinda vanished while doing that. But then he turns up on Star Hill to kill Shion. I ask – how? How was he able to get into Sanctuary without anyone seeing or noticing him? ESPECIALLY if he needed to cross the Twelve Houses. Yes, according to Episode Zero, most of the Gold Saints were absent on their special training. But come on. At least Shura would have been suspicious. Plus, how the hell did nobody notice the explosion of Cosmos when he killed Shion? Unless it is canon that he killed Shion with a punch through the chest. If not, then I don't believe nobody noticed.
-        How is it that after the Silver Saint arc, we see nobody train for any Cloth anymore? You should think that with so many Silvers gone, Athena would seek successors. I mean, the war against Hades was drawing close! How on earth did NOBODY think of stocking up their ranks? Not Athena, not the Gold Saints, not even freaking Dohko, who after Shion's passing should be the most experienced one of the bunch. Yes, yes, focus could have remained on the protagonists. But at least a little something? Like one of the Gold Saints traveling around, finding possible new recruits? Some of the Bronzes perhaps helping with training possible future Bronze Saints? Marin and Shaina spar with some Silver Saint trainees? Also, some unused constellations would have made for quite some interesting Cloths and abilities.
-        That said – even after all the arcs, at least a couple of other Saints should be alive to fight against Hades and its forces. Right? So why are the only ones we see the ten Bronzes, the Gold Saints, Marin and Shaina? The only answer would implicate Shion has done a real bad job at maintaining Sanctuary, if after all the deaths in the Silver Saint arc, major part of its fighting force is gone.
-        And… h-how the hell is Hyoga DRIVING A FREAKING CAR?! At his age?!
 P.S.: I think the two most painful points for me are the one with Seika, how she absolutely cannot be Marin, but people still think she might be, and the one where the existence of the rest of the Gold Saints is revealed as this big secret, when it should be known by everyone. Those two blunders... they just hurt. They really do.
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nyxshadowhawk · 5 years ago
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Nyx’s Complete List of Goth Names
Abaddon: From Greek, means "destruction" or "demon of the pit."
Acheron: The River of Woe in the Greek underworld.
Achlys: Greek primordial goddess of poison, misery, and sadness, personification of the death-mist.
Adonis: Means "lord" (as in Adonai). In Greek mythology, the most beautiful youth in the world, loved by both Persephone and Aphrodite. Died tragically.
Adrian/Adrienne: English, from Latin; means "from Hadria" (the Adriatic Sea). I've heard sources saying it means "dark one," but I haven't been able to confirm this. It's still a really cool, kind of gothy name. (Also the real name of Alucard from Castlevania.)
Ahriman: The Zoroastrian devil/evil god.
Akeldama: Means "field of blood," a place in Jerusalem associated with Judas.
Alastor: Greek, means "avenging spirit."
Alcmene: (Female) Means "might of the moon," Heracles' mother in mythology.
Alecto: One of the Erinyes (Furies), the goddesses of vengeance. Means "unceasing."
Altair: The brightest star in the constellation Aquila (the Eagle), from Arabic, meaning "the bird."
Amaranth: (Female) Greek; a mythical purple flower that never fades, a symbol of immortality.
Amethyst: A dark purple crystal, associated with wine and preventing drunkenness.
Andromeda: Greek, means "thinks like a man," the name of a princess in mythology, a constellation, and a galaxy.
Anubis: Jackal-headed Egyptian god of death and embalming.
Arcana: From Latin "hidden, secret" (literally "to shut in a chest"), refers to secrets or mysteries. Also refers to the groups of cards in a tarot deck (the major and minor arcana).
Arianrhod: Means "silver wheel," Welsh goddess of the moon, stars, and the flow of time.
Artemis/Diana: Greco-Roman goddess of the hunt, the moon, and virginity
Asmodeus: Means "wrath-demon," a Goetic demon appearing in a number of texts, representing luxury, sensuality, and lust. (Also Asmodai)
Asphodel: A white flower planted on graves, said to grow in the Greek underworld, and therefore heavily connected with death.
Astaroth: (Unisex) A demon in the Ars Goetia (from the Lesser Key of Solomon), described as a male demon and a Duke of Hell, but the name likely comes from the Phoenician goddess Astarte (or Ashtoreth), who is a version of Ishtar (Babylonian) and Inanna (Sumerian).
Astor: A French and German name from Occitan, meaning "goshawk." A goshawk is a bird of prey. I've read on naming sites that this name was originally a derogatory term for young men with hawk-like, predatory characteristics, but I haven't found anything to confirm this. This is the name of my alter-ego and one of the main protagonists of Shadowbook.
Astra/Astrid/Asteria: From Greek, "star." In Greek mythology, Asteria was a Titaness of astrology and prophecy, the mother of Hecate. An aster is also a star-shaped flower.
Atropos: The last of the Moirai (Fates), who cuts the thread at the end of life.
Autumn: The darkening part of the year, when everything is dying, and Halloween happens.
Azrael: The name of the Angel of Death, means "whom god helps." (Also Asriel)
Azazel: A Watcher's name, means "scapegoat." Taught humanity the arts of weaponry and cosmetics. Commonly associated with demons and evil.
Baphomet: A goat-headed, winged deity associated with Satanism; obscure etymology.
Bastet: Egyptian goddess of cats.
Belial: A Hebrew name meaning "worthless," a name of the devil or a demon.
Belladonna: Also called "deadly nightshade," an extremely poisonous plant that causes hallucinations and death.
Bellona: Roman goddess of war
Bezaliel: Means "shadow of God" or "damaged," a Watcher's name.
Blodeuwedd: Pronounced "bluh-DIE-weth," means "flower-face." A Welsh goddess who was turned into an owl.
Bram/Brom: Technically short for Abraham ("father of a multitude"), the author of Dracula, Abraham "Bram" Stoker.
Bran: Welsh, "raven." The name of Bran the Blessed, a giant and king of Britain in Welsh mythology.
Branwen: (Female) Welsh, means "white raven" or "fair raven."
Breksta: Lithuanian goddess of night, dreams, and twilight.
Caligo: Latin word for “mist,” “gloom,” and “darkness.” (Calignes is the plural, which could also work) (feminine)
Calypso: Greek, "she who conceals." The nymph who kept Odysseus imprisoned on her island.
Carmilla: A lesbian vampire from the gothic novel of the same name, predating Dracula. The name seems to have been invented by the author.
Cassius: Roman, "empty, hollow."
Ceridwen: Welsh enchantress or goddess who stirs the cauldron of poetic inspiration.
Cernunnos: Celtic forest god depicted as having a stag's antlers.
Chiroptera: Literally means "hand wing," the order of bats in taxonomy.
Circe: Means "circle." In Greek mythology, a sorceress who turned Odysseus' men into pigs (and later helped them).
Cora: From the Greek name Kore, meaning "maiden." A name for Persephone. (Also, Coraline.)
Cornix: A princess transformed into a crow by Athena in Ovid's Metamorphosis.
Corvus/Corax: Corvus corax is the scientific name of the common raven.
Crimson: Dark, rich red, the color of wine or blood. One of the Gothiest colors that isn't black. It's very easy for this to sound banal or cringey, especially if it's a character's given name, so use with caution. Scarlet works, too, if you want something easier to use as a given name.
Damian: From Greek, means "to tame," tends to be associated with demons or vampires, a bit cliche at this point.
Dantalion: A Goetic demon, the name is particularly cool.
Desdemona: A tragic character in Othello, comes from Greek and means "ill-fated." Can be shortened to "Mona."
Desmodus: The genus of common vampire bats. (D. rotundus)
Devana: Slavic version of Artemis/Diana, goddess of the hunt.
Dorian: The corrupt, depraved, nearly immortal and astonishingly beautiful protagonist from The Picture of Dorian Gray. (Turns out Oscar Wilde invented the name; it did not exist before the book was written.)
Dracul: Romanian, "devil" or "dragon." What really needs to be said?
Ebony: A very dark wood.
Echo: In Greek mythology, a nymph who was cursed so she would only repeat the names of others; died while pining after Narcissus.
Edgar: Anglo-Saxon, "rich spear." The name of the one and only Edgar Allen Poe (also, my cat).
Eidolon: A type of spirit or ghost in Greek liteature. Also a genus of bats.
Eirlys: Welsh, "snowflake."
Elatha: An Irish god, described as the "beautiful Miltonic prince of darkness with golden hair." Not sure what the source for that is, but cool!
Elvira: Spanish, means "foreign true," a stereotypical Goth name (and the name of the Mistress of the Dark!). Actually, I first ran across the name in reference to a vengeful ghost called Elvira Blood in New England folk legend. Spooky!
Empusa: A kind of Greek female demon (similar to Lamia) that served Hecate.
Endora: Comes from the Witch of Endor, a Biblical sorceress.
Endymion: In Greek mythology, a handsome shepherd whom Selene fell in love with. Zeus granted him eternal sleep so he would never age. Means "to dive, to enter."
Erebus: Greek primordial god and personification of darkness.
Esmeralda: Spanish name meaning "emerald." (Also, the heroine in The Hunchback of Notre Dame.)
Ethelinda: Anglo-Saxon, means "little serpent."
Euryale: Greek, means "far-roming," the middle Gorgon sister.
Eurynomos: Greek chthonic spirit of corpses.
Eventide: It could work as a name.
Fenrir: A wolf demon in Norse mythology, the son of Loki.
Finvarra: Irish, King of the Fairies (and sometimes King of the Dead), a benevolent entity that ensures a good harvest and abundance.
Gabriel: The angel. Means "warrior of god." Gabrielle also works (and is the name of Lestat's mother).
Gehenna: A Hebrew name for Tartarus or Hell.
Golgotha: From Hebrew, "skull," the place where Jesus was crucified.
Grimm: The surname of two German brothers who recorded a classic collection of oral folklore and fairy tales, many of which are very... well, grim.
Habundia: A Celtic name for the queen of witches and night creatures, possibly another name for Nicnevan. Etymology uncertain.
Hades: The Lord of the Underworld in Greek mythology (also the name of the Underworld itself).
Hawthorn: A type of shrub steeped in folklore, associated with fairies and with Beltane (1st May).
Hecate: Greek goddess of witchcraft, magic, the occult, the moon, necromancy, the Underworld, and the crossroads. Means "worker from far off."
Hellebore: A type of evergreen flower, some species of which are poisonous. Believed to summon demons, also believed to cure madness.
Hemlock: A plant used to poison people.
Herne: "the Hunter," a ghost that haunts Windsor Forest (sometimes identified with The Horned God).
Hesperos/ia: The evening star.
Hypnos: The Greek god of sleep.
Iblis: Satan in Islamic lore.
Idris: Welsh, "ardent (passionate, fiery) lord."
Igor: Russian, "bow-warrior." Became famous as the name of Frankenstein's hunchbacked assistant, even though he doesn't exist in the book and his name in the original Universal film was Fritz.
Ingram: Swedish name meaning "Ing's raven."
Iolanthe: Greek, means "violet flower." (eye-oh-LAHN-thay)
Iseult/Isolde/Isolt: A tragic lover in Arthurian legend.
Jasmine: A type of flower, in this case referring to Cestrum nocturnum, or night-blooming jasmine.
Kali: Hindu goddess of destruction, name means "the black one."
Kasdaye: Means "hidden power," the name of a Watcher (another name for Tamiel). (Unisex)
Kiara/n: Gaelic, means "little black one."
Kimaris: A Goetic demon. (Male)
Kokabiel: Means "angel of the stars," a Watcher.
Lacrimae: Latin word for tears.
Lamia: A female demon in Greek folklore who devours children. The name of the witch in the film version of Stardust.
Lenore: A variant of Eleanor (also a good name), means "foreign," the lost love of the protagonist of "The Raven," also has her own poem.
Leshii: A Russian god of hunting, similar to Veles
Lethe: River of Forgetfulness in the Greek Underworld.
Leviathan: From Hebrew, "twisted in folds," a Biblical sea monster. Sometimes associated with Midgard's Serpent.
Libitina: A Roman goddess of corpses, funerals, and the dead.
Ligeia: Greek, the name of a Siren, also the subject of a Poe story of the same name.
Lilah: Comes from the Arabic Leila, meaning "night."
Lilith: Means "of the night" or "screech owl." In Hebrew mythology, Adam's first wife and the Queen of Demons. She refused to submit to Adam, so she left Eden and began screwing around with demons. Often considered a succubus or vampire, or a champion of feminism. A lilim is also a succubus or incubus.
Loki: Trickster god in Norse mythology with ambiguous morals.
Lorelei: German, means "murmuring rock," the name of a German Siren.
Lucius/Lucifer/Lucien: All mean "light" or "light-bringer," a name associated with Satan.
Lucy: From Dracula, also could be a shortening/feminization of Lucifer. (Still means "light.")
Luna: The Roman personification of the moon.
Lycoris: A Greek word that means "twilight," the name of an Asian red flower, associated with death and the underworld (much like Asphodel).
Maeve: Comes from Gaelic, means "the intoxicating one." Associated with the Fairy Queen Mab.
Makaria: Greek goddess of blessed death, a daughter of Hades and Persephone.
Mania: Etruscan/Roman goddess of the undead, ghosts, and underworld spirits, goddess of madness. Also a modern medical term referring to a specific mental illness.
Mara: A name steeped in darkness, referring to a nightmare spirit (nightmare), a (benevolent) goddess of death in Latvian mythology, a (male) demon in Buddhist mythology, and a Sanskrit word meaning "death."
Medea: In Greek mythology, the sorceress who helped Jason, but then went on a murderous rampage when he left her. Considered to be a priestess (or, rarely, daughter) of Hecate.
Megaera: One of the Erinyes (Furies), the goddesses of vengeance. Means "grudge."
Melanie: Greek, "black" or "dark."
Melantha: Greek, "dark flower."
Melinda/Mindy: English, "black serpent."
Melinoe: Greek goddess of ghosts, nightmares, and madness, a daughter of Hades and Persephone.
Mephistopheles: The name of the devil in the Faust legend, could be from Hebrew and mean "disperser of lies," or from Greek and mean "does not love the light."
Merle: (Unisex) from French, "blackbird."
Mina: From Dracula. Short for Wilhelmina, a German name meaning "will-helmet."
Morana/Marzanna: Slavic goddess of winter and death.
Morgan/Morgana: From Welsh, means "sea-circle," the name of Morgan le Fay, a sorceress in Arthurian Legend (who may be good or evil, depending on your interpretation).
Morpheus: The Greek god of dreams, the main protagonist of Neil Gaiman's Sandman comics. (Also, The Matrix.)
Morrigan: An Irish goddess of death, battle, and ravens, name means "great queen."
Morwenna: A Welsh name meaning "maiden." ("Morwanneg" is the name of the witch in Stardust.)
Nepenthe: A magical drug from the Odyssey that cures sorrow and causes forgetfulness.
Nephthys: Means "lady of the temple," the Egyptian goddess of the dead, mate of Seth and mother of Anubis.
Nergal: Mesopotamian god of death, war, and destruction.
Nicnevan: Queen of the Fairies in Scottish folklore. She is the Scottish version of Hecate.
Nightshade: A family of plants including tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplants, but also the notorious deadly nightshade.
Nisha/nt: A Hindi name meaning "night."
Nocturne: Self-explanatory. Refers to a night prayer, a musical composition evoking night, or a night scene in art.
Nyctala/Nyctea: Two obsolete genera of owls. Nyctala is the genus of Boreal owls before it was changed to Aegolius, and Nyctea was the genus of Snowy owls before it was changed to Bubo. Both probably mean or are related to "night."
Nyctalus: A genus of bats.
Nyctimene: A princess from Ovid's Metamorphoses who was so ashamed at having been molested by her father, she refused to show her face in daylight. Out of pity, Minerva (Athena) turned her into an owl. Also a genus of bats.
Nyx: A Greek primordial goddess and personification of the Night. (also Nox)
Oberon: From French, means "elf-ruler," the name of the Fairy King in A Midsummer Night's Dream (Referred to in one scene as the "king of shadows").
Obsidian: A shiny black volcanic stone.
Onyx: A type of banded stone, most famously black. (The word comes from the Greek for "fingernail.")
Ophelia: A tragic character in Hamlet, which probably comes from Greek and means "help."
Orcus: A Latin word for Hell, and a Roman god who punished the dead (possibly an epithet of Hades/Pluto).
Orion: A hunter in Greek mythology, and the famous constellation.
Orlok: The name of the ugly-looking vampire from Nosferatu.
Orpheus: Greek name, possibly comes from the word orphe, "darkness." The name of a demigod with an impossibly beautiful singing voice who attempted to rescue his love from the underworld, failed, and then died tragically.
Pan: Greek goat-horned god of nature, herds, and lust, induces "panic."
Pandora: Name means "all-gifted." In Greek mythology, the name of the first woman, who opened a box that unleashed evil upon the world.
Pandemonium: The capital city of Hell in Paradise Lost, name literally means "all demons."
Persephone: Greek Queen of the Underworld, wife of Hades, and goddess of springtime. You probably know her story. Her name might mean "thrasher of grain" (which would make sense for an agricultural goddess), but could also mean "slayer."
Phaenon: Means "shining" in Greek, refers to the planet Saturn (which has long been associated with darkness in mythology, being the furthest planet from the sun that is observable with the naked eye).
Pluto: Hades' Roman name, also the ninth planet, or what was the ninth planet.
Ransley: An English name meaning "raven's meadow."
Raven: This is by far the most cliche Goth name there is (I originally created this list to provide alternatives to the name “Raven”), but it’s classic, it’s simple, it’s unisex, and it’s undeniably Goth. 
Ravenna: Self-explanatory, also an Italian city.
Renwick: Scottish surname meaning "raven settlement."
Sable: A word referring to the color black.
Salome: From Hebrew shalom, "peace." The daughter of Herod and Herodias, unnamed in the Bible, who requested the head of John the Baptist and danced the Dance of the Seven Veils.
Samael: Means "venom of God," a vicious angel of death, the mate of Lilith. He is not technically a fallen angel, but a servant of God who does the dirty work.
Sekhmet: Egyptian goddess of war and destruction, with the head of a lioness. Her name means "power" or "might." Her epithets included "Mistress of Dread," "Lady of Slaughter," and "She Who Mauls." Ra had to stop her from killing people by getting her drunk on beer that was dyed to look like blood.
Selene: Greek personification of the moon. (Includes "Selena" and variants.")
Senka: Basque name meaning "shadow."
Seren: (Unisex) Welsh name meaning "star."
Seth: A name of Set or Sutekh, the Egyptian god of evil, chaos, and storms. He killed his brother Osiris and cut his body into pieces, and then was defeated by Horus. His head is that of an animal that looks kind of like an aardvark but is not an actual existing creature (at least not anymore). He was associated with the color red and the desert. His name possibly means "one who dazzles."
Shadow: Self-explanatory.
Silas: From Greek, means "from the forest." In The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman, it's the name of a [spoiler]vampire.
Silver: The color of the moon, and it looks nice with black.
Sinistra: Technically, it's Latin for "left," but it obviously has "sinister" connotations.
Skiá: Greek word for "shadow" or "shade."
Skotos: Ancient Greek word for "darkness," especially the darkness of death or the netherworld, or obscurity.
Skuld: The last of the Norns (Fates), representing death. Means "debt."
Sombra: The Spanish word for "shadow."
Somnus: Roman name for Hypnos, sleep.
Spyridon: Greek name referring to wicker baskets, which implies wealth. Could also be connected to the Latin spiritus, which means breath or spirit. Usually shortened to Spyro.
Stella: The Latin word for "star."
Stheno: Greek, means "forceful." The eldest of the Gorgon sisters.
Styx: The River of Hate in the Greek Underworld, the most famous of its rivers. The souls of the dead are ferried across it by Charon, and the gods (foolishly, if you ask me, seeing as they always regret it) swear on the Styx to make unbreakable oaths. The word "Stygian" means "of the River Styx" and refers to something very dark or abyssal.
Summanus: Roman god of nocturnal thunder.
Sylvia​​​​​​/Sylvana: Latin, "from the forest."
Tanith: Phoenician, "serpent lady."
Tartarus: The deepest hell-pit of the Greek Underworld, where evildoers are punished.
Tempest: A wild storm, from the Latin for "time."
Thanatos: The Greek personification of Death.
Tiamat: Babylonian primordial dragon goddess.
Tisiphone: One of the Erinyes (Furies), the goddesses of vengeance. Means "murder-retribution."
Tristan: Welsh, "riot, tumult." (Although it sounds like the Latin tristis, which means "sad.") The name of Isolt's lover in Arthurian Legend, and the name of the protagonist in Stardust.
Valerian: Roman, means "strength" or "valiant," also the name of an herb.
Vega: (Unisex) Latin from Arabic, means "falling" or "swooping," a star in the constellation Lyra. It is one of the brightest stars in the entire sky.
Veles: Slavic horned god of cattle, forests, magic, and the underworld.
Veliona: Slavic goddess of death
Velvet: A fabric that most goths love to wear.
Vervain: An herb (verbena), meaning "sacred bough," considered a magical or holy herb in multiple cultures.
Vesperus: (or just Vesper), a Roman name meaning "evening." (Vespera for a girl)
Vespertilio: A genus of bats.
Victor: The first of the trio of gothy male "V" names, means "conqueror," as in "victory." Frankenstein's first name. (Victoria also works for a girl.)
Vincent: The second of the trio of gothy male "V" names, also meaning "conquering," from Latin.
Vivian: The Lady of the Lake in Arthurian legend. From French, means "lively."  (Another name for the Lady is Nimue, which is Welsh and may be related to the Greek word for "memory." She sealed Merlin in a tree.)
Vlad: The third of the trio of gothy male "V" names, the name of Vlad Tepes or "Vlad the Impaler," the real-life Romanian prince who inspired Count Dracula. It's Slavic and means "ruler."
Willow: A beautiful and mournful-looking tree.
Winter: The dark, cold season. Unisex!
Yvaine: Scottish, means "evening star," the name of the star in Stardust.
Zagreus: The name of a chthonic Greek god who was potentially a son of Hades and Persephone or Zeus and Persephone, considered in Orphic lore to be Dionysus before he was dismembered and reincarnated.
Zillah: Hebrew name meaning "shadow."
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