Etruscan Goddesses
Alpan: The goddess of love and the underworld. She belongs to the Lasas and is usually portrayed naked.
Artume: The goddess of night and death, but also the personification of growth in nature.
Evan: The Etruscan goddess who personifies personal immortality. Evan belongs to the Lasa.
Feronia: A goddess of fire and fertility.
Horta: A goddess of agriculture.
Lasa: In Etruscan myth, they are female deities and the guardians of graves. They are often found in the company of Turan, the goddess of love. The Lasa are sometimes portrayed with wings, but also without. Their attributes are mirrors and wreaths.
Losna: The goddess of the moon.
Menrva: The Etruscan version of the Greek Athena, and portrayed similarly (with helm, spear, and shield). Just like Athena, Menrva was also born from the head of a god, in this case Tinia. She is part of triad with Tinia and Uni.
Nortia: The goddess of fate and fortune. Her attribute is a large nail and at the beginning of the New Year a nail was driven into a wall in her sanctuary.
Thalna: The goddess of childbirth. She is often found in the company of the god Tinia, who is presumably her consort.
Thesan: The Etruscan goddess of the dawn, and the patroness of childbirth.
Turan: The Etruscan goddess of love, health, and fertility, and the patroness of the city Vulci (in the current Italian province Viterbo). Turan is usually portrayed as a young woman with wings on her back. The pigeon and black swan are her symbolic animals and she is accompanied by the Lasas.
Uni: The supreme goddess of the Etruscan pantheon. She is the goddess of the cosmos, and the city goddess of Perugia. Together with her husband Tinia and the goddess Menrva she forms a triad. Her son is the hero Hercle (clearly Hercules / Heracles).