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60+ Firbolg Druid Names from Celtic Myth for D&D 5e

Slow as glaciers and older than most kingdoms, the firbolg druid does not need a name to know who it is. It knows itself through the weight of hill-soil underfoot, the memory of every oak it has sheltered beneath, and the clan-song it has never needed to write down. When the wider world demands a name, a firbolg reaches into the same vocabulary it uses for everything: the land itself. This guide gives you more than 60 curated firbolg druid names across three themed tables — Celtic-giant earth compounds, soft forest-giant names, and circle-keeper titles — with the lore and D&D 5e mechanical tips you need to build one of the game's most rewarding druid characters.

Below you will find three tables: Celtic-rooted earth-compound names that draw on Old Irish and Gaelic roots, softer forest-giant names suitable for firbolgs raised in deep woodland, and circle-keeper titles earned through deed or role within a druid grove network.

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Celtic-Giant Earth Compound Names

These firbolg druid names draw directly on Old Irish and Scottish Gaelic root words, combining two nature or landscape elements the way a firbolg would encode a memory. Most firbolgs who interact with druid circles use a two-root public name of this type — it is short enough for humanoids to pronounce, meaningful enough to serve as an identity, and rooted in the same soil mythology that the Firbolg carry from their Irish mythological origins.

# Name Celtic Roots Circle Fit
1 Dairfionn Dair (oak) + fionn (bright, blessed) Land (Forest), Shepherd
2 Tonnmaer Tonn (wave, great size) + maer (keeper) Moon, Land (Coast)
3 Ceallach Ceall (grove) + -ach (person of) Land, Shepherd
4 Fearnoc Fearn (alder) + -oc (little place) Land (Swamp), Spores
5 Braonard Braon (raindrop) + ard (height) Land (Mountain/Arctic)
6 Rúanmor Rúan (red) + mór (great) Moon, Wildfire
7 Darach Darach (oak tree, direct Irish) Land (Forest), Shepherd
8 Colmcille Colm (dove) + cille (church/grove) Shepherd, Land
9 Sleibhín Sliabh (mountain) + -ín (small one) Land (Mountain)
10 Caolfhionn Caol (slender) + fionn (bright) Land, Dreams
11 Torcán Torc (boar, giant-tooth) + -án Moon, Land
12 Maolruadh Mael (devotee) + ruadh (red/fierce) Moon, Wildfire
13 Ailbheach Ailbhe (ancient rock) + -ach Land (Mountain), Moon
14 Cuillenchú Cuilenn (holly) + chú (hound) Moon, Land (Forest)
15 Branfhear Bran (raven) + fear (man/keeper) Spores, Land
16 Glasrua Glas (grey-green) + rua (red) Shepherd, Land
17 Tonnshliabh Tonn (great wave) + sliabh (mountain) Moon, Land (Arctic)
18 Feichin Fé (alder-wood wand) + -chín Shepherd, Land
19 Crannóg Crann (tree) + -óg (young/place) Land (Swamp/Forest)
20 Muirdeach Muir (sea) + deach (good, ancient) Land (Coast), Moon

The Lore Behind Firbolg Druid Naming

The Firbolg of Irish mythology — the Fir Bolg, "people of the goddess Bolg" or "bag-men" in older etymologies — were one of the mythological races who inhabited Ireland before the Tuatha Dé Danann. In D&D 5e lore, firbolgs are giant-kin who inhabit deep forests and ancient hills, revering nature with a patience and depth that elves respect and most humanoids cannot fully perceive. A firbolg does not name itself: it is named by what it tends.

This produces a distinctive naming pattern. A young firbolg might spend decades without a name beyond a clan-descriptor like third-tree-tenderer or the one who remembers the old fire. When it joins a druid circle and must give a name at the grove's threshold, it chooses a two-root compound that encodes a deed or landscape: Dairfionn (bright-oak), Tonnmaer (great-tide-keeper), Ceallach (grove-person). These names are never given by a parent — they are self-chosen, usually at the moment of first grove-contact, and considered binding for the rest of the firbolg's very long life.

🌲 Soft Forest-Giant Names

Not all firbolg druids carry the weight of ancient battles in their names. Firbolgs raised in deep-canopy forests — far from contested territory — develop a gentler vocal register, and their names reflect it. These names use softer consonants and longer vowels drawn from the same Gaelic well, but with the emphasis shifted toward growth rather than fortitude.

Name Feel Circle Fit
Caoimhe Gentle, flowing (Irish: gentle, beautiful) Shepherd, Dreams
Síomha Peace-quiet (Irish: peaceful) Land, Shepherd
Fionnuala White-shoulder (swan imagery) Shepherd, Dreams
Aodhán Little fire, warmth (Irish: small flame) Wildfire, Land
Luiseach Radiant (Irish: light-bringer) Land, Moon
Eabha Irish form of Eve — life, living Shepherd, Land
Ríonach Royal/queenly, ancient grove-authority Land, Moon
Naoise Warrior-poet duality (mythological) Moon, Land
Sorcha Bright, luminous (Irish: light) Land, Dreams
Tadhg Poet, bard — lore-keeper identity Shepherd, Land

Game-Specific Naming Tips

Firbolg Druids in Circle of the Moon (D&D 5e)

Circle of the Moon is the mechanical optimum for firbolgs. Powerful Build carries over into Wild Shape forms, the +2 Wisdom bonus raises Wild Shape CR thresholds at key levels, and Hidden Step gives the firbolg an invisible escape between transformations. Names for firbolg Moon druids should carry weight: Torcán, Rúanmor, Maolruadh, Cuillenchú. These are names that sound earned — because Moon druids earn every transformation they survive.

Firbolg Druids in Circle of the Land (D&D 5e)

The Circle of the Land frames the druid as the living memory of a terrain. For a firbolg, this is not metaphor — it is literal function. A firbolg Land druid has tended the same mountain range or river valley for three or four centuries, and its name encodes that relationship. Choose a terrain-specific root: Sleibhín for a mountain firbolg, Muirdeach for a coastal one, Fearnoc for one born in an alder swamp. The name should be the terrain.

Firbolg Druids in Circle of the Shepherd (D&D 5e)

Circle of the Shepherd is the most narratively native subclass for a firbolg druid. The firbolg's Speech of Beast and Leaf — the racial trait that lets them communicate simple ideas to animals and plants — functions as a permanent, low-grade version of what Shepherd druids do ritually. Names for firbolg Shepherd druids pull from the gentler table: Caoimhe, Síomha, Eabha, Glasrua. The Shepherd's role is care, not combat mastery, and the name should carry that softness.

Circle-Keeper Titles for Firbolg Druids

These are the titles bestowed by a druid circle upon a firbolg who has served long enough to hold a formal role. Because firbolgs are reluctant to leave their territory, a firbolg who does consent to act as a circle's envoy or lore-anchor is considered unusually committed, and their titles reflect this gravity.

Title Role / Identity Circle Fit
Rootanchor Firbolg who refuses to leave; the grove's immovable memory Land, Shepherd
Hillwatch Sentinel of a specific highland; speaks only when the hill speaks first Moon, Land (Mountain)
Stonefold Keeper of the circle's boundary stones and ritual stones Land, Moon
Deepmere Warden of a subterranean or swamp water-cache; knows what lives below Spores, Land (Swamp)
Ashgrove Post-wildfire reclaimer; tends land that burned so others fled Wildfire, Land
Clanmemory Carries the full oral lineage of the circle; never forgets Shepherd, Land
Slowwarden Given to firbolgs whose patience outlasted every conflict around them Any circle
Thresholder Grove-gate keeper; decides who may enter the inner circle Moon, Land
Rootvoice Primary speaker to plant-kind; translates root-memory for the circle Shepherd, Spores
Firstsnow Arctic firbolg title; witnessed the oldest winter the circle can recall Land (Arctic), Moon

Frequently Asked Questions

Are firbolgs good druids in D&D 5e?

Firbolgs are one of the strongest druid races in D&D 5e. Their +2 Wisdom directly boosts spell save DCs and concentration checks. Hidden Step provides once-per-short-rest bonus-action invisibility — a significant combat tool with no other class required. Powerful Build supports Wild Shape forms, Speech of Beast and Leaf adds flavour to every nature interaction, and the overall tone of the race aligns perfectly with the druid's role as nature's representative among humanoids.

How do firbolgs name themselves in D&D?

Firbolgs do not traditionally use personal names. They identify through deed-descriptions, landscape epithets, and clan-memory. When interacting with humanoid society, most firbolg druids adopt a short Celtic-sounding two-root compound that encodes a relationship to their home terrain — Dairfionn (bright-oak), Tonnmaer (great-tide-keeper), Ceallach (grove-person). Most carry two identifiers: a clan-internal epithet shared only with trusted kin, and a public name used with other circles and humanoid settlements.

What druid circles suit firbolgs best in D&D 5e?

Circle of the Moon is mechanically optimal — Powerful Build and the Strength bonus complement beast forms, and Hidden Step provides an invisible exit between transformations. Circle of the Shepherd is the most narratively natural fit: the firbolg's Speech of Beast and Leaf functions as a permanent version of what Shepherd druids do ritually. Circle of the Land suits firbolgs who have tended one landscape for centuries and serve as its living memory.

What Celtic roots work best for firbolg druid names?

Old Irish and Scottish Gaelic roots are the richest source material. The most productive roots include: Dair- (oak), Fearn- (alder), Tonn- (wave, great size), Bran- (raven), Ceall- (grove), Fionn- (bright, blessed), Rua- (red, fierce), Glas- (grey-green), Sliabh- (mountain), and -ach (place or person suffix). Combining two roots — Dairfionn, Fearnach, Tonnmaer — produces names that feel authentically Celtic and distinctly firbolg without borrowing from named historical figures.

Can a firbolg have a last name in D&D?

Firbolgs do not traditionally use family surnames. Their clan bonds are remembered through oral lineage recitation rather than an inherited name-tag. Many firbolg druids who interact regularly with humanoid society adopt a second identifier for practical reasons — a grove name earned at circle initiation, a landscape descriptor (Hillwatch, Rootmere, Stonefold), or a clan-memory condensed to a two-word phrase. Treat firbolg surnames as earned epithets that describe what the firbolg has done, not who their parents were.

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