List of trees

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a partial list of trees of significance in history, religion, size or age. The list includes actual trees located throughout the world, as well as trees from myths and trees from fiction.

Contents

[edit] Real forests and individual trees

[edit] Africa

Living
  • The Cotton Tree, historic symbol of Freetown, Sierra Leone.
  • The Wonderboom, a sprawling fig tree in Pretoria, South Africa.
  • The Baobab, occasionally known colloquially as "upside-down tree" (from the Arabic legend which claims that the devil pulled out the tree and planted it upside down). This is likely derived from older African lore. The story goes that after creation, each of the animals was given a tree to plant and the hyena planted the baobab upside-down. It is also the national symbol of Madagascar.
Historical

[edit] Asia

Living
Historical
  • The Bodhi tree, a Sacred Fig tree under which Buddha is supposed to have been enlightened, at Bodh Gaya, India. The current tree at the site is a replacement.
  • Guilty Chinese Scholartree, located in Jingshan park, on which Emperor Chongzhen hanged himself shortly after escaping the Forbidden City in Beijing, China (the original tree died and was replaced by a replica).
  • Changi Tree, a historical visual landmark located in Singapore. Thought to be a specimen of Sindora wallichii, with an estimated height of 75 metres, it was felled with explosive charges during the Second World War to prevent its use as a ranging aide by the approaching Japanese artillery.
  • The Lone Pine (tree), a soltary tree on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey, which marked the site of the Battle of Lone Pine in 1915.
  • The Kannimara Teak inside Parambikulam Wildlife Sanctuary, Kerala, India is one of the oldest and largest living teak trees. It had a girth of 6.52 metres and a height of 48.25 metres when the measurement was taken in 2003.
  • A tree within the Korean DMZ was the focus of the Axe Murder Incident, in which two United States Army officers were killed by North Korean soldiers. The killings led to Operation Paul Bunyan, named for the legendary lumberjack. The tree was eventually cut down under the watch of over 800 soldiers.

[edit] Europe

Living
Historical
Petrified

[edit] North America

Living
Historical
Petrified
Other

[edit] Oceania

Living
Historical

[edit] Mythological and religious

Further information: World tree and Axis mundi

[edit] Fictional

[edit] See also

[edit] External links