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Beacons of belief: seasonal change and sacred trees in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages

Beacons of belief: seasonal change and sacred trees in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages
Beacons of belief: seasonal change and sacred trees in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages
This chapter addresses the role of trees in religious belief in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages. Despite considerable change to religious practices over the course of millennia, trees have retained a relatively constant symbolic function within systems of belief as signs of the annual seasonal cycle, which affects humans no less than it does the world around us. The principal focus of this chapter is the earliest period for which there is surviving “historical” evidence, namely the early medieval, in which Anglo-Saxon traditional religion was supplanted by Christianity. In the form of the Holy Rood, trees remained a prominent symbolic presence in Christianity throughout the medieval period, being intimately intertwined with the life of Christ and Christian spiritual history.
trees, belief, Anglo-Saxon, prehistory, Middle English, religion, seasons, plants, woodland, forests
2945-5936
27-45
Palgrave Macmillan
Bintley, Mike
d3cdf609-493e-42a0-ba98-43ba2159439b
Bintley, Michael D.J.
Locker, Martin
Symons, Victoria
Wellesley, Mary
Bintley, Mike
d3cdf609-493e-42a0-ba98-43ba2159439b
Bintley, Michael D.J.
Locker, Martin
Symons, Victoria
Wellesley, Mary

Bintley, Mike (2017) Beacons of belief: seasonal change and sacred trees in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages. In, Bintley, Michael D.J., Locker, Martin, Symons, Victoria and Wellesley, Mary (eds.) Stasis in the Medieval West? Questioning Change and Continuity. (The New Middle Ages) 1 ed. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 27-45. (doi:10.1057/978-1-137-56199-2_2).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

This chapter addresses the role of trees in religious belief in Britain from prehistory to the later Middle Ages. Despite considerable change to religious practices over the course of millennia, trees have retained a relatively constant symbolic function within systems of belief as signs of the annual seasonal cycle, which affects humans no less than it does the world around us. The principal focus of this chapter is the earliest period for which there is surviving “historical” evidence, namely the early medieval, in which Anglo-Saxon traditional religion was supplanted by Christianity. In the form of the Holy Rood, trees remained a prominent symbolic presence in Christianity throughout the medieval period, being intimately intertwined with the life of Christ and Christian spiritual history.

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More information

Published date: 22 February 2017
Keywords: trees, belief, Anglo-Saxon, prehistory, Middle English, religion, seasons, plants, woodland, forests

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 484246
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484246
ISSN: 2945-5936
PURE UUID: 87f022a3-c0b9-4db1-b952-12d28757fde9
ORCID for Mike Bintley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7244-6181

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Nov 2023 18:45
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:14

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Contributors

Author: Mike Bintley ORCID iD
Editor: Michael D.J. Bintley
Editor: Martin Locker
Editor: Victoria Symons
Editor: Mary Wellesley

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