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.The landscape of Britain at
the time The Green Man was being carved in our churches was much different than
that which we find today. Trees dominated vast areas of the country. The Weald
of Kent, Sussex and Surrey are the remains of a massive swathe of woodland which
covered much of southern England. Trees were revered, it was believed they had
souls and as such should be treated accordingly. Trees were consulted as oracles
over important matters. Sacred groves were also planted. Today yew trees
can be found in churchyards everywhere, protected and cared for they are a link
to our Pagan past indeed in some cases yew trees pre-date the age of the
church. The stand as a symbol of death and rebirth due in some part to its
longevity and the ability to send branches down into the soil which in turn root
thus giving the tree an new lease of life.
Could the representation of
the Green Man be a form of the 'tree spirit'?
Sacred
Groves & Sacred Trees
Trees were once
revered in many parts of the world the concept rests on the earliest conceptions
of the unity of life in nature in the sense of fellowship with the divine centre
and source of life.The sacred tree is deeply rooted in primitive religions. Trees have been
treated with reverence for many centuries, the Sycamore (ficus sycamorus) and
the Date Palm (pheonx dactyfera) were represented in the temple architecture of
ancient Egypt.
Christianisation
of the Roman Empire saw the decline of ancient groves. The Emperor Theodosious
ll (5th c A.D.) issued an edict directing that the groves be cut down
unless they had already been appropriated for some purpose compatible with
Christianity. A few of them became monastery gardens and churchyards. Due mainly
to the rise of religions like Christianity and Islam which advocate faith in one
god And were explicitly for the eradication of Pagan practices, the tradition of
maintaining sacred groves and sacred trees vanished from most countries, though
Brahmanic Hinduism includes several of the local cults which are often
nature-based.
Outdoor sanctuaries were
the first temples of the gods, a sacred place demarcated for the deity was
called temenos in Greek and templum in Latin.
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