Both classical and quantum theories of radiation damping in ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic resonance relaxation are given. Effects of demagnetization and anisotropy, that is, of elliptical classical precession, are included. In the classical theory a phenomenological approach to ferromagnetic resonance relaxation by means of the Landau-Lifshitz equation is also presented. In the quantum theory, the magnon-photon interaction Hamiltonian is derived, and the radiation-damped linewidth is obtained by computing the transition matrix element and also the one-magnon self energy. As noted long ago by Einstein, each photon is emitted in a random but specific direction, and only on average does the quantum radiation pattern reproduce the classical. To first order, however, this reproduction is shown to be exact, correcting a recent calculation by Shrivastava.