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Ancient Tree Lore & Modern Irish Gifts
IrishShopShare
As the trees bud and unfurl their leaves this spring, it’s nice to know that our Celtic ancestors loved them deeply. Long before Earth Day, they saw trees as more than sources of wood, shade and fruit. This island was once 80% forest, and the people saw specific qualities in different types of trees. Trees were rich in meaning. The tree of life is a beloved motif on Irish gifts and a profound symbol representing infinity and the connection between all living things. It has endured because trees do speak to many of us, touching our souls with far more than their practical uses.
Behon Law was the legal framework of pre-Christian Ireland. It was a detailed and complex system of rules and penalties for violating them that organized people as well as trees into various groups. The laws were quite progressive and sophisticated, and they included serious penalties for harming trees.
Our ancestors grouped trees into four categories: nobles, commoners, lower divisions and brushes. The penalties for harming trees depended on their category. Oak, hazel, holly, ash, yew, crab apple and Scots pine were all classed as nobles, and the penalty for cutting one down was two and a half milk cows. (Presumably culprits cut down more than one tree at a time.) Rowan, elm, hawthorn and willow were among the commoners, while blackthorn, whitebeam and aspen were in the lower division.