Mobile Search Menu
Article Cards Featured Image Salmon of Knoweldge

Fintan, the Magic Salmon of Knowledge

The legend of Fintan suggests salmon have long been associated with wisdom.

Temma Ehrenfeld

Dec 21, 2022

If you're Irish or Scottish, you know the Fianna as a band of fighters, the mythic heroes of thousands of stories told mainly in verse from across Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man.

But you may not know that their most famous leader is said to have gained his wisdom from a legendary salmon named Fintan.

Fintan's tale exemplifies the revered place salmon hold in Irish and Scottish history, and perhaps could give us all a better appreciation for this noble, legendary species.

Screen Shot at .. PM
Made by User:Nicoco555 with the drawings of User:Yhaou and User:Perhelion, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

First, a Little History...

While the legend of the Fianna has been embellished by myth and folklore, the term fian probably came from a group of real people called the Féine who dominated the midlands of Ireland from roughly the fifth to 10th centuries.

Immediately before and after Roman rule, the Féine grew wealthy from piracy along the western and southern coasts of Britain.

Young noble boys were sent away at a young age in those days. As teens, they could join a fian, a small group who had not yet inherited property, and live in the wilderness. These boys, and a few girls, could recite and compose poetry and pass athletic tests like pulling a thorn from their foot while running at top speed.

Fianna, the plural, meant “wilderness/wild ones."

The Famed Leader of the Fierce Fianna

Some of these teen rebels never settled down. They became a pool of fighters available for hire to police conflicts between warring families or kingdoms.

Finn Mccool Comes to Aid the Fianna
Fionn mac Cumhaill meets his father's old retainers in the forests of Connacht; illustration by Stephen Reid.

The legend has it that as a boy, Fionn mac Cumhaill was sent to live with a poet, Finnécces, on the banks of the River Boyne.

Finnécces (which can be translated as “white salmon") had vast knowledge. He knew a story from the ancient druids of a salmon who had eaten nuts from magical hazel trees and acquired all the knowledge of the world.

The druids prophesied that the man who ate Fintan, the Salmon of Knowledge, would become wisest of all.

Soon after Fionn arrived, Finnécces went fishing and caught Fintan. Reeling the fish in, he carried it to Fionn and ordered him to cook it. But don't eat a single bite, he told Fionn.

Finnécces went to gather firewood and returned to see the salmon ready to eat. He asked Fionn if he had eaten any.

No, said Fionn, but he confessed that he touched the hot salmon while cooking it. This had burned his thumb, and he reflexively put his thumb in his mouth.

The Wisest of All

Finnécces then ordered Fionn to eat the whole salmon, understanding that the boy would become the wisest of all. After the boy ate Fintan, Finnécces ordered him to put his thumb in his mouth. At that moment, the tale goes, all the wisdom of the world rushed into the boy's mind.

Bigfish Belfast closeup
The Big Fish, a 33-foot-long ceramic sculpture by installed in 1999 on Donegall Quay in Belfast, Northern Ireland, represents Fintan, the legendary Salmon of Knowledge. Kissing the sculpture is said to impart wisdom.

From that point on, to know the answer to any question, he merely had to suck his thumb.

In the early tales, Fionn is a loner and a seer. Over time, the Fianna gathered around him, much like the medieval warriors gathered around King Arthur and Robin Hood.

It's easy to imagine that salmon struck the Celts as intelligent. The mighty fish traveled far and remembered how to return to breeding grounds.

Salmon bear spots, say the Irish, because of the hazelnuts they have eaten. They bear one spot for each hazelnut from the nine hazel trees of wisdom, one of which grows at the head of each of the seven big rivers of Ireland.

And of course, it's possible that the Celts believed that salmon were intelligent because they noticed that the humans who ate them regularly seemed to become smarter than those who did not.

“Fish is brain food" is a very likely an old idea indeed.

Sockeye salmon banner ad collection link