thumb|upright=1.3|[[Nicolas Poussin's Moses rescued from the Nile (1638) shows Pharaoh's daughter, who is unnamed in the Bible, but called Bithiah in Jewish tradition.]]
Some people who appear in the Bible but whose names are not given there have names that are given in Jewish religious texts, Christian sacred tradition, or apocryphal texts.
Hebrew Bible
Serpent of Genesis
Revelation 12 is thought to identify the serpent with Satan, unlike the pseudepigraphical-apocryphal Apocalypse of Moses (Vita Adae et Evae) where the Devil works with the serpent.
Wives of the antediluvian patriarchs
The pseudepigraphical Book of Jubilees provides names for a host of otherwise unnamed biblical characters, including wives for most of the antediluvian patriarchs. The last of these is Noah's wife, to whom it gives the name of Emzara. Other Jewish traditional sources contain many different names for Noah's wife.
The Book of Jubilees says that Awan was Adam and Eve's first daughter. Their second daughter Azura married Seth. For many of the early wives in the series, Jubilees notes that the patriarchs married their sisters.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!Patriarch
!Wife
|-
||Cain ||
|-
||Seth || Azûrâ
|-
||Enos || Nôâm
|-
||Kenan || Mûalêlêth
|-
||Mahalalel || Dinah
|-
||Jared || Baraka
|-
||Enoch || Edna
|-
||Methuselah || Edna
|-
||Lamech (Seth's line) || Betenos
|-
||Noah ||
