A variant spelling or archaic reference to Fingal, the legendary Scottish-Irish warrior or the basalt rock formation Fingal's Cave.
From Gaelic 'Fionnghall' meaning 'fair foreigner,' referring to the legendary Ossian hero. The term entered English through 18th-century Romantic literature, particularly through James Macpherson's Ossian poems, which popularized Celtic mythology.
Fingal's Cave in Scotland actually exists and is famous for its hexagonal basalt columns that look almost artificially carved—for centuries, locals told fantastical tales about it being named after a legendary giant until geology proved the columns form naturally from cooling lava, showing how science can verify (or debunk!) old stories.
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