Lucina

Etymology
From and, from.

Proper noun

 * 1) An epithet of the Roman goddess Juno or (less often) Diana in the role of goddess of childbirth, midwives, and newborns.
 * 2) A separate goddess of those fields, a daughter of Jupiter and Juno and counterpart to the Greek Eileithyia.
 * 3) * 2014, Alison Findlay, birth, entry in Women in Shakespeare: A Dictionary, unnumbered page,
 * He[Pericles] can only pray to Lucina, goddess of childbirth and 'gentle midwife/ To those that cry at night' to speed Thaisa's delivery (Per. 3.1.10–14), and has not even time to commit her body to the sea during the storm.
 * , a Main Belt asteroid.
 * He[Pericles] can only pray to Lucina, goddess of childbirth and 'gentle midwife/ To those that cry at night' to speed Thaisa's delivery (Per. 3.1.10–14), and has not even time to commit her body to the sea during the storm.
 * , a Main Belt asteroid.

Translations

 * Armenian:
 * French:
 * Italian:
 * Japanese: ルーキーナ
 * Latin: Lūcīna
 * Russian: Луцина
 * Ukrainian: Люцина

Etymology
Feminine of, from , sometimes related to the phases of the moon or understood to intend "One who Brings into the Light".