Etymology
InIrish legend
Fionn's birth and early adventures are recounted in the narrative ''The feud
The Fianna were a band of warriors also known as a military order composed mainly of the members of two rival clans, "Clan Bascna" (to which Finn and Cumall belonged) and "Clan Morna" (whereBirth
Muirne was already pregnant; her father rejected her and ordered his people to burn her, but Conn would not allow it and put her under the protection of Fiacal mac Conchinn, whose wife,Boyhood
Fionn and his brother Tulcha mac Cumhal were being hunted down by the Goll, the sons of Morna, and other men. Consequently, Finn was separated from his mother Muirne, and placed in the care of Bodhmall and the womanThumb of Knowledge
Fionn was a keen hunter and often hunted with Na Fianna on the hill of Allen in County Kildare, it is believed by many in the area that Fionn originally caught the Salmon of Knowledge in the River Slate that flows through Ballyteague. The secret to his success thereafter when catching “fish of knowledge” was to always cast from the Ballyteague side of a river. He gained what commentators have called the "Thumb of Knowledge" after eating a certain salmon, thought to be theFire-breather of the Tuatha de Danann
Almu as eric
Before Finn completed the feat of defeating the firebrand of the fairy mound and defending Tara, he is described as a ten-year-old "marauder and an outlaw". It is also stated elsewhere that when Finn grew up to become "capable of committing plunder on everyone who was an enemy", he went to his maternal grandfather Tadg to demand compensation ( éric) for his father's death, on pain of single combat, and Tadg acceded by relinquishing the estate of Almu (the present-dayAdulthood
Fionn's sword was called "Mac an Luinn".Love life
Fionn met his most famous wife,Death
According to the most popular account of Fionn's death, he is not dead at all, rather, he sleeps in a cave, surrounded by the Fianna. One day he will awake and defend Ireland in the hour of her greatest need. In one account, it is said that he will arise when thePopular folklore
Many geographical features in Ireland are attributed to Fionn.Historical hypothesis
The 17th-century historianToponymy
Fionn Mac Cumhaill was said to be originally fromRetellings
T. W. Rolleston compiled both Fenian and Ultonian cycle literature in his retelling, ''The High Deeds Of Finn and other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland'' (1910). James Stephens published ''Modern literature
Macpherson's Ossian
Finn mac Cumhal was transformed into the character "Fingal" inTwentieth century literature
Fionn mac Cumhaill features heavily in modernSee also
* Irish mythology in popular culture: Fionn mac Cumhaill *Notes
References
;Citations ;Bibliography ;(''External links