Finn-men
Finn-men, also known as, Muckle men, Fion and Fin Finn, were Inuit sighted in the 17th century around the Northern Isles of Scotland.
Sightings
The first recorded sighting was in Orkney, in 1682. James Wallace, writing in about 1688, described a Finn-man in his "little Boat" at the south end of Eday being seen by the people of the island from the shore, and then fleeing swiftly when the islanders put out a boat to try and apprehend him. In 1684, a Finn-man seen at Westray was connected with the disappearance of fish from the area. A boat was captured in Orkney, and sent to the Royal [College of Physicians of Edinburgh|Physicians Hall] in Edinburgh.Origins
The "Finn-men" were initially identified as "Finns", an umbrella term used in the local language of the Orcadians to denote either Sami, Kven or Forest Finns. However, these "Finn-men" were in fact Inuit from the Davis Strait region, a fact recognised by Wallace. As it was considered more probable that they had sailed to the islands from the Cap of the North, the misnomer persisted nonetheless, possibly due to certain phonological similarities between the Greenlandic language spoken by the kayakers and the Finnic languages.Wallace's eldest son James added a note to a 1700 publication of his father's account, suggesting they had been driven off course to Scotland by storms. The most likely reason for their arrival is that they were escaped prisoners, having been taken by European ships as exotic curiosities. Such was the concern about this practice that in 1720 the States General of the Netherlands passed a law prohibiting the murder or kidnapping of Inuit.