Fianna

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In Irish mythology, the Fianna were Irish warrior-hunters who served the High King of Ireland in the 3rd century AD. Their adventures were recorded in the Fenian Cycle. Their last leader was Fionn mac Cumhaill.

Membership was subject to rigorous tests. In one such test the applicant would stand in a waist-deep hole armed with a shield while nine warriors threw spears at him; if he was wounded, he failed. In another his hair would be braided, and he would be pursued through the forest; he would fail if he was caught, if a branch cracked under his feet, or if the braids in his hair were disturbed. He would have to be able to leap over a branch the height of his forehead, pass under one as low as his knee, and pull a thorn from his foot without slowing down. He also needed to be a skilled poet.

A fian (singular), as defined by the Brehon Laws, was a band of young men, usually young aristocrats who had not yet come into their inheritance of land, who lived apart from society as mercenaries, bandits and hunters, and could be called upon in times of war. The fianna of legend, while usually depicted as a standing army serving the High King, also appear as rival bands living rough in the woods. The two main factions in the legendary fianna were the Clann Baíscne of Leinster, led by Fionn, and the Clann Morna of Connacht, led by Goll.

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