Goddess of womanhood and childbirth associated with the Greek Hera by the Romans (4)
I believe the answer is:
juno
(Other definitions for juno that I've seen before include ". . . . and the Paycock (Sean O'Casey)" , "Jupiter's wife" , "She played with the Paycock" , "Fourth largest known asteroid" , "In Roman myth, goddess ofmarriage - to Paycock?" .)