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Common Ash Tree

Fraxinus excelsior

Status: Once common, but due to outbreaks of Common Ash Dieback, Common Ash has been experiencing rapid decline of population and concern for risk of extinction. In Europe, over 40% of the trees that are native to the continent are threatened.

In the Norse epic poem, Havamal, the world tree Yggdrasil, is a giant ash tree, eternally green, at the center of the cosmos. The mighty trunk rises to the heavens, and the roots reach deep to pierce the nine realms.

Yggdrasil has three roots, each at a well. The first well, Hvergelmir, is deep below thick ice, the well of poison, but also the well of life, and from which the first living beings were created. A dragon lies here and chews upon the root. His foil is an eagle who lives at the top of the tree, and the two communicate enmity via messages carried up and down Ygdrassil's vast trunk by a squirrel. The second root lies at Mimir's well, the well of wisdom, and the third root is tended to by the three Norn fates (past, present, future), Urd, Verdanai, and Skuld, at Urd&apps's well.

In his pursuit of higher knowledge, the god Odin sacrificed himself, wounded with a spear, to hang from the tree for nine nights. On the final night, just before he fell from the tree, Odin acquired the secrets of the runes. The story is a reminder of how knowledge and self-transformation is never attained without personal sacrifice.

 

References:
Pautasso, M., Aas, G., Queloz, V. and Holdenrieder, O. (2013). 'European Ash (Fraxinus excelsior) dieback - A conservation biology challenge'. Biological Conservation 158: 37-49.

Encyclopedia Britannica: Yggrasill, Norse Mythology. https://www.britannica.com/topic/Yggdrasill

Hagen, S. N. (1903). The Origin and Meaning of the Name Yggdrasill. Modern Philology, 1(1), 57-69.