Heroes of the Gael

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Celtic
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Composition
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Cormac
Corpus
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Culture
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Diarmaid
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Eighteenth century
Epics
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Fenian
Fian
Fianna
Finn
Fionn
Folklore
Gaelic
Grady
Heritage
Hero
Heroes
Heroic
Highland
Historical
History
Instance
Language
Lays
Literature
Mac
Macpherson
Material
Medieval
Mid
Modern
Narrative
Nation
Native
Oisin
Oral
Ossian
Ossianic
Patrick
Poems
Poetry
Popular
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Romance
Saint
Scholars
Scholarship
Scottish
Stories
Story
Tales
Texts
Tradition
Translation
Twentieth century
Versions
Warrior

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691204734
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The evolution of the Fenian tradition of story and song, traced over 1,400 years

Stories about Fionn macCumhaill (also known as Finn McCool) and his roving warrior band, the Fianna, have engaged audiences for more than a millennium. Fionn and the Fianna—Gaeldom’s defenders during a legendary third-century golden age—are the heroes of the most prolific body of narrative in the Gaelic tradition, spanning 1,400 years of oral and written transmission, from the earliest extant records to the present day. In this book, Natasha Sumner traces these stories across the centuries and throughout the Gaelic world, examining the fates of Fionn and the Fianna and investigating the persistent popularity of these tales.

Sumner describes the development of the Fenian tradition from early seventh-century texts through the medieval and early modern creation of its greatest literary achievements; the controversy stirred by James Macpherson’s adaptation of Fenian characters and plots in his popular eighteenth-century epic, Ossian; and the Fianna’s place in the modern Irish and Scottish nations, beginning with the Celtic Revival in the 1860s. Part (pseudo) historical fiction, part (proto) fantasy, these stories project perceptions of a bygone Gaelic heroic age through the lens of their contemporary realities. The Fenian tradition, Sumner argues, provides ample space for imaginative engagement with the narrative past, the historical present, and the aspirational future.

Natasha Sumner is associate professor of Celtic languages and literatures at Harvard University. She directs the Fionn Folklore Database and coedited the essay collection North American Gaels: Speech, Story, and Song in the Diaspora.

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