Fortingall Yew

The yew in June 2011

The Fortingall Yew is an ancient European yew (Taxus baccata) in the churchyard of the village of Fortingall in Perthshire, Scotland. Modern expert estimates have put its age at between 1,500 and 3,000 years. It may be the oldest tree in Britain.

Age

Modern expert estimates put the age of the tree at between 2,000 and 3,000 years, although it may be a remnant of a post-Roman Christian site and around 1,500 years old.[1] Others have suggested an age as great as 5,000 years,[2][3] although recent research into yew tree ages[4][5] suggests that it is likely to be nearer the lower limit of 2,000 years. This still makes it one of the oldest known trees in Europe,[6] although the root system of the Norway spruce Old Tjikko in Sweden is at least 9,500 years old.[7] The Fortingall Yew is possibly the oldest tree in Britain.[1]

The tree

One trunk of the Fortingall yew

The tree's once massive trunk (16 metres, or 52 feet in girth when it was first taken notice of in writing, in 1769[8]) with a former head of unknown original height, is split into several separate stems, giving the impression of several smaller trees, with loss of the heartwood rings that would establish its true age.[9] This is a result of the natural decay of the ancient heartwood, which reduced the centre of the trunk down to ground level by 1770.[10] Other than this, the tree is still in good health, and may last for many more centuries. By 1833 it was noted that "large arms had been removed and even masses of the trunk, carried off, to make drinking-cups and other curiosities."[11] It is protected by a low wall erected in 1785[12] to preserve it but it can still be easily viewed. The yew is male.[13]

Clippings from the tree are to be taken to the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh to form part of a mile long hedge. The purpose of this "Yew Conservation Hedge Project" is to maintain the DNA of Taxus baccata from ancient specimens in the UK as, worldwide, the trees are threatened by felling and disease.[14]

History

The area immediately surrounding Fortingall has a variety of prehistoric archaeological sites including Càrn na Marbh, a Bronze Age tumulus. Place-name and archaeological evidence hint at an Iron Age cult centre at Fortingall, which may have had this tree as its focus.[13] The site was Christianised during the Dark Ages, with the yew already full grown, perhaps because it was already a sacred place. A recollection of 1804 noted that "the boys of the village" had damaged the yew "kindling their fire of Bealltuinn at its root."[15]

Rev. James MacGregor, author of the Book of the Dean of Lismore was a minister in the church during the 16th century.[16]

Legend

According to local legend, Pontius Pilate was born in its shade and played there as a child.[17]

See also

A cutting of the Fortingall Yew at Kindrogan Field Studies Centre

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bevan (2004) pp. 38–39
  2. "2500 years" according to Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, noted in Lindsay (1884) pp. 220-27
  3. Fred Hageneder, The Meaning of Trees: botany, history, healing, lore (2005:201).
  4. Harte 1996
  5. Kinmonth 2006
  6. "Wanted: Fat, old, gnarled trees" (28 June 2007) Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved on 29 September 2007. "The Fortingall Yew near Callendar in Scotland - believed to be the oldest tree in the UK and possibly Europe."
  7. Owen, James. "Oldest Living Tree Found in Sweden". National Geographic. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
  8. Hon. Daines Barrington, Transactions of the Royal Society, 1769.
  9. This is also true of the Llangernyw Yew in North Wales.
  10. Notice by Thomas Pennant, who measured the girth at 56½ feet, and noted that within living memory the heartwood had conjoined the trunks at a height of three feet (noted by Lindsay 1884:221).
  11. Patrick Neill, in Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, noted in Lindsay.
  12. "By the father of Dr. Irvine of Pitlochry" according to Lindsay.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Meredith, Allen (1986). "A Living Legend" (PDF). ancient-yew.org. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  14. Ross, Shan (7 November 2008) "You may not be able to trace your roots back 5,000 years but yew trees can". Edinburgh. The Scotsman.
  15. "At the commencement of my incumbency, 32 years ago", according to Rev. Robert Macdonald in 1836, noted in Lindsay (1884) p. 222
  16. Keay and Keay (1994) p. 393.
  17. (BBC News) "Ancient tree 'one of UK's best'"

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fortingall Yew.

Coordinates: 56°35′53″N 4°03′04″W / 56.598158°N 4.051007°W