Fingal! thou king of heroes! Ossian, next to him in war! ye have fought in your youth; your names are renowned in song.
Gaelic Oisín Irish warrior-poet of the Fenian cycle of hero tales. The name Ossian became known throughout Europe in 1762-63 when the Scottish poet James Macpherson (1736-96) published the epics Fingal and Temora, which he represented as translations of works by the 3rd-century Gaelic poet Ossian. The poems were widely acclaimed and influential in the Romantic movement, but their authorship was later doubted, notably by Samuel Johnson (1775), and they were eventually determined to have been written largely by Macpherson
ossian
الواصلة
Os·sian
النطق
علم أصول الكلمات
() An anglicisation, made known by James Macpherson, of Irish Oisín, diminutive form of os (“deer”).