Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Áine

Meaning — Derived from the Old Irish "áine" meaning "brightness", "radiance", or "splendour", possibly related to "áin" meaning "joy". Áine is a significant figure in Irish mythology — a goddess of summer, wealth, and sovereignty associated with the fairy mound of Knockainey in County Limerick. She was the queen of the Munster fairies and was closely connected with the sun and the ripening of crops.·Old Irish origin·Female·AWN-ya

Áine Áine radiates summer warmth and the sovereignty of the land itself — a name for characters whose presence is associated with flourishing and abundance. The fairy queen mythology connects the name to a type of woman who is both beautiful and terrifyingly powerful, whose favour brings prosperity and whose displeasure brings ruin. Characters named Áine tend to be magnetically generous in their good moods, with a depth of emotion that can turn as swiftly as the Irish summer.

Best genres for Áine

FantasyMythologyHistorical FictionHistorical RomanceLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Áine

Áine

Irish Mythology / Munster tradition Traditional Irish Mythology

The goddess-queen of Knockainey, associated with summer's bounty and the sovereignty of Munster, whose fairy mound was the site of midsummer rituals into the 19th century.


Variations & nicknames

ÁineAineAnyaAnna

Pairs well with

Áine Ní BhriainÁine O'BrienÁine McCarthyÁine RiordanÁine HennessyÁine O'Sullivan

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Related names

Niamh

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish word "niamh" meaning "bright" or "radiant". The name belongs to one of the most celebrated figures of Irish mythology, Niamh of the Golden Hair, a princess of Tír na nÓg (the Land of Eternal Youth) who fell in love with the poet-warrior Oisín and carried him away on her white horse across the sea.

Sorcha

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish word "sorcha" meaning "brightness", "radiance", or "light". It shares the same root as the modern Irish adjective "sorch" meaning "clear" or "bright". Sorcha has been used as an Irish equivalent of Sarah or Clara in anglicised contexts, though it is entirely distinct in origin. The name has been popular in Ireland and Scotland for centuries.

Brigid

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "Brigit" or "Bríg", meaning "exalted one" or "the high one", from a Proto-Celtic root "briganti" meaning "high, lofty, the exalted one". Brigid was one of the most important goddesses of pre-Christian Ireland, associated with poetry, healing, smithcraft, and the hearth fire. The Christianised Saint Brigid of Kildare (c. 451–525) became one of Ireland's three patron saints.

Eithne

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "eithne" meaning "kernel" or "grain nucleus" — the innermost, most essential part of a nut or seed. The name carries connotations of concentrated essence and inner worth. Eithne was a popular name in early medieval Ireland, borne by several queens and saints, and appears frequently in genealogies of Irish nobility.

Cliona

Old Irish · “Possibly derived from Old Irish "clú" meaning "fame" or "renown" with a feminine suffix. Clíodhna (also spelled Clíona or Cliodhna) is a significant figure in Irish mythology — one of the three waves of Ireland and a queen of the sídhe (fairy mounds) of Munster. She was sometimes said to be the most beautiful woman in the world, ruling the otherworldly realm of Tír Tairngire.


More Old Irish names

Fionn

The feminine use of Fionn, from Old Irish "find" meaning "white", "fair", or "fair-haired". While predominantly a masculine name in mythology, Fionn has been used for girls in Ireland, carrying the same meanings of fairness and brightness. The name connects bearers to one of Ireland's most celebrated mythological figures while the feminine use gives it a distinctive cross-gender quality.

Diarmuid

Derived from the Old Irish "Diarmait", possibly from "di" (without) and "airmit" (envy) — meaning "without envy" or "free from jealousy". Alternatively interpreted as "freeman". In Irish mythology, Diarmuid Ua Duibhne was the most handsome warrior of the Fianna, whose magical "love spot" on his forehead caused any woman who glimpsed it to fall instantly in love with him, leading to the legendary elopement with Gráinne.

Aoibhe

From the Old Irish "aoibh" meaning "beauty", "radiance", or "pleasantness". Aoibhe is a variant of Aoife and shares the same etymological root, but is treated as a distinct name in Irish usage. The name belongs to the same cluster of Irish feminine names derived from concepts of brightness and beauty that include Niamh and Aoife, and has been in use in Ireland since the early medieval period.

Fionnán

Diminutive of Fionn, from Old Irish "fionn" (white, fair, blessed) with the suffix "-án" indicating smallness or affection — "little fair one" or "dear fair one". Saint Fionnán (also Finán) of Kinnitty was an Irish monastic saint. The diminutive form gives it a warmth and approachability that the full Fionn lacks, suggesting someone whose brightness invites rather than overawes.

Muirenn

From the Old Irish "muir" (sea) and "fionn" (white, fair, blessed), meaning "white sea" or "fair-haired one of the sea". Distinct from Muireann (which shares similar elements), Muirenn appears in Irish genealogical and mythological records. The sea element connects the name to the liminal world where Ireland meets the Atlantic, a geography that deeply shapes Irish imaginative culture.

Aodhán

A diminutive of Aodh, the Old Irish name for the god of fire (later Anglicised as Hugh). Aodhán means "little fire" and was an extremely common name in early medieval Ireland — Saint Aodhán of Ferns (Aidan of Lindisfarne in the Northumbrian tradition) was a 7th-century Irish monk who founded the famous monastery on Lindisfarne, carrying Celtic Christianity into England. The diminutive form gives it warmth and approachability while retaining the fire quality.


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