Starting a little #ThickTrunkTuesday series today: every week a short 🧵on a different #Tree and its #historicalecology, meanings, uses, #Mythology etc.

Today it’s the #Yew - a tree I’ve been intrigued by ever since we first came across this big old yew tree next to #Wilmington church here in #Sussex. It’s over 1,500 years old and pretty amazing! 1/x

2/x a while later i noticed this #yew right next to St Mary’s #church here in #Eastbourne and realised there may be connection between yews and churches. It happened to be Easter that day - also about #Pagan and #christian syncretism
3/x so decided to look into this a bit more - and, of course (as many of you here will know already) - came across so many wonderful old yew trees next to churches! I collected them all on Twitter - here just two of the most famous ones: two #Yew trees outside St Edward's Parish Church, Stow-on-the-Wold ...
4/x and of the wonderful old #AnckerwyckeYew in #Berkshire. The history around this tree alone is simply amazing - a copy of the #MagnaCarta was signed under it in 1215; a copy that perhaps was written by a group of nuns living nearby, on Runnymede island.There is a great chapter on this Yew in Zora del Buono's 'Das Leben der Maechtigen)

5/x So many #UK churches were built next to already existing Yew trees. There are various hypotheses around this, but all stem from the fact that #Yews were long (long before Christianity) sacred trees, due to their longevity and also perhaps because they are so poisonous. You can read a lot online but I particularly enjoyed this #BBCSounds #NaturalHistories #podcast with Brett Westwood (a really wonderful series all round by the way)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b082ymp5

Natural Histories - Yew - BBC Sounds

Brett Westwood explores our relationship with the ‘churchyard tree’, the yew. From 2016

BBC

6/x But it's not just in the #UK, throughout Europe there is a long history of #Yew #Mythology - both as #TreeOf Death and #TreeOfLife. In Greek Mythology the way to #Hades is lined with Yews, and some suggest #Yggdrasil, the amazing #Norse tree of life, may have been a Yew

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yggdrasil

https://www.heimat-pfalz.de/pfalz-kolumne/hans-wagners-naturseite/903-die-eibe-taxus-baccata-der-baum-der-auferstehung.html

Yggdrasil - Wikipedia

@pvonhellermannn

thank you for the beautiful thread!

#Yggdrasil caught my eye - bc i had just a couple of nights ago wondered about it, and ashes - i'm on holiday and there are ashes unlike where i live - and even made this toot with pics of ashes, the island is tiny and wonderful Iniö.

they are big #ash on farmyard, smaller ones (one of the trees is actually a #rowan, as it happens, sacred to Finns) one next to the church (!) and one that i could see from my window.

https://hypercube.masto.host/@outi/110640429357452938

Outi Leskinen (@[email protected])

Attached: 4 images aina ku näen saarnia niin ajattelen yggdrasilia, maailman puuta, ylistä ja alista, joita se yhdistää ja oravaa joka kulkee ylös ja alas, ja midgårdiin (mietin suuren osan lauttamatkaa tänne ett mikä sen nimi oli, ja sitt myöhemmin muistin - Ratatosk - ? viikingit ei enää ollu shamanisteja, mutt Yggdrasil kai se on osa vanhempaa kerrostumaa? tavallaan hassu nähdä sellanen kirkonkin vieressä... ja itse asiassa mun ikkunasta näkyvä puu ei olekaan leppä vaan saarni.. 💚🪲🌱☘️🌞🌳

Hypercube
@outi ah, those ashes are wonderful! and yes, i think that is the tree most associated with #Yggdrasil. I am so intrigued by all this too, know so little at the moment

@pvonhellermannn

yea, i had no idea that yews were associated to Yggdrasil / tree of life!

it's all very interesting...

i just got this thought - people in envt movement maybe started becoming interested in animals of other species, but maybe now we (?) are making it deeper, and starting to think of trees as beings?

the next step should be rivers and stones and other inanimate (sic!) things, and then we may become indigenous again, so to speak? deconstructing the western culture... dunno?