[{"post_id":1487,"location":"Edinburgh","latitude":"55.9433","longitude":"-3.20019","name":"The Story of Urashima Taro"},{"post_id":1010,"location":"Valtos","latitude":"57.595969270036235","longitude":"-6.163760581913492","name":"The Story of Daorghlas and the Smithy"},{"post_id":1507,"location":"Drymen","latitude":"56.07595921899732","longitude":"-4.446907094391751","name":"The Story of the White Heather"},{"post_id":1345,"location":"Isle of Skye","latitude":"-6.199967132546876","longitude":"57.200356184137995 ","name":"The Story of C\u00f9-Chulainn on Skye"},{"post_id":310,"location":"Highlands","latitude":"57.331080493783624","longitude":"-4.426159319651189","name":"The Story of Diarmuid and Gr\u00e1inne"},{"post_id":1351,"location":"Knockfarrel ","latitude":"57.587938129391524","longitude":"-4.495027201570502","name":"The Story of Fionn and Garry"},{"post_id":1348,"location":"D\u00f9n Dearduil","latitude":"57.28205791799692","longitude":"-4.454841369433606","name":"The Story of D\u00e8irdre"}]
The Fianna were a fierce band of warriors led by Fionn MacCumhail that roamed around Ireland and Gaelic Scotland in ancient times. Tales of their adventures make up most of what is known as the ‘Fenian Cycle’ in Celtic mythology and oral tradition. This was a mythology closely connected to the natural world. There are traces of this narrative tradition in the landscape in the many placenames that feature the names of the Fianna.