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About Paladin Names

In most fantasy traditions, a paladin's name carries double duty — it must sound like it belongs to a capable warrior, and it must also suggest the divine compact that makes a paladin something more than a fighter. Paladins who break their oath sometimes abandon their name as part of their fall, while those who renew it may choose a new name as a symbol of their restoration. A name is not merely an identifier for a paladin; it is a declaration of who they have chosen to be.

Male Paladin Names

Male paladin names draw heavily from medieval Latin, Arthurian tradition, and the naming conventions of fantasy's most celebrated holy warriors. Names like Aldric, Cassian, Devout, Aleron, Galvan, Theodric, and Auryn convey strength, honour, and divine purpose simultaneously. Many male paladin names include roots meaning light (lux, sol), protection (ward, shield), or virtue (just, true, pure).

The most iconic male paladin names in gaming and fiction share a quality of gravitas — these are names that sound like they were given to someone expected to do great and terrible things in the service of something larger than themselves.

Female Paladin Names

Female paladin names combine the authority of a warrior with the spiritual weight of divine calling. Names like Seraphel, Auriel, Lysander, Celestia, Brynn, and Valindra feel appropriate for women who have dedicated their lives to a sacred oath. Female paladin names often draw from angelic naming traditions, particularly for those sworn to deities of light, justice, or protection.

A female paladin's name should feel like it belongs to someone who has both tenderness and steel — who can lay hands on the wounded and lift a blade against the wicked with equal conviction and without contradiction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Good paladin names balance martial strength with spiritual gravitas. Names drawn from Latin and medieval sources work particularly well — Aldric, Cassian, Auryn, Seraphel, or Devout carry the right combination of power and piety. Many players also choose names with meanings related to light, justice, protection, or divine service.

No — in D&D 5e, paladins are no longer locked to the lawful good alignment. A paladin's power comes from their sacred oath, not their alignment. While Oath of Devotion paladins lean toward lawful good, an Oath of Vengeance paladin might be chaotic good, and an Oathbreaker paladin can be outright evil. The key is maintaining their oath, not their alignment.

The Oath of Devotion is the quintessential holy warrior paladin — the knight in shining armour archetype. Devoted paladins uphold justice, protect the innocent, and oppose evil directly. They gain access to sacred weapon and holy nimbus abilities, and their spell list emphasises healing and radiant damage. This is often the best subclass for new players.

Famous paladins include Uther Lightbringer and Tirion Fordring from World of Warcraft, Sturm Brightblade from Dragonlance, and Cadderly Bonaduce from the Forgotten Realms. Arthurian knights like Galahad and Percival serve as the template for the paladin archetype in almost all fantasy traditions.

A tiefling paladin is one of D&D's most compelling concepts — infernal heritage in direct tension with a divine calling. Names that blend tiefling traditions (virtue names like Hope or Justice, or infernal-sounding names like Mordai or Kairon) with a paladin's spiritual weight create immediate dramatic tension and rich backstory potential.