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The May Tree

Page history last edited by Ann Vipond 6 years, 10 months ago

The May Tree

 

Hawthorn or 'May' (Crataegus monogyna) is rarely in flower on the First of May - it generally blooms closer to the middle of the month. But the 'May-tree' did  flower at the beginning of May in mediaeval times when many folk traditions were first formulated.

The blossoming date was changed by the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in 1752 when eleven days were taken out of the month of September. Subsequently, 1 May was tugged back to what had formerly been 20 April.

 

Hawthorn blooming in a hedgerow at White Horse Hill, Oxfordshire (photo Tim Healey)

 

 

Other greenery

When in season, hawthorn hedges smothered in white and pink blossom would have been the most spectacular features of the landscape. So, 'Bringing in the May' typically meant bringing in branches of hawthorn.

The term ‘May’ could, however, be used more generally for any greenery brought in to deck houses – plum, sycamore and birch were also favoured in some parts of Britain. There were even traditions by which plants were brought in and hung as insults on people’s doors; elder, nettle or thistle, for example, for the scold or the slattern.

 

Practical uses

Hawthorn is ubiquitous in Oxfordshire, growing as readily on the chalk uplands of White Horse Hill as in the water meadows of the Windrush at Minster Lovell. For country folk its greatest practical use was as a hedging plant. The word comes from the Anglo Saxon Hagathorn where Haga means hedge.

 

Alternative names include whitethorn and ‘quickthorn’.  Quick means living (as in ‘the quick and the dead’). Villagers could enclose a patch of land by ‘quickset hedging’ or setting live cuttings directly in the earth where they would grow to form a dense barrier.  

 

The fruits, flowers and leaves of the hawthorn have medicinal uses known throughout western Europe since the 17th century. Doctors prescribe hawthorn chiefly for heart problems and cardiovascular disease. Extracts are processed into tinctures, tablets and capsules.

 

The leaves and leaf-buds of young hawthorns can be eaten straight from the tree. In country districts they were known as 'bread-and-cheese', and supplied welcome fare in times of hardship or famine.

 

Fruits ripen in autumn to red berries called 'haws' which are used for making jellies, jam and 'Hawthorn Brandy'. 

 

A widespread taboo

In centuries past, people associated the smell of hawthorn blossom with the odour of death. In Maytime you might deck the outsides of houses with branches, but there was a taboo against bringing them into the home. Botanists have since discovered that the chemical trimethylamine present in hawthorn blossom is also one of the first chemicals formed in decaying animal tissue.

 

In bygone times, when corpses were kept in homes for several days prior to burial, people would have been all too familiar with the smell of death.  Small wonder that hawthorn blossom was unwelcome inside the house.

 

The Faery Tree

Hawthorn Tree Fairy by Cicely Mary Barker.

Her 'Flower Fairies of the Spring'

was published in 1923

 

 

If it is allowed to grow freely, hawthorn will become a tree of around 10 metres. Such isolated trees are often revered in local folk tradition where they are said to be inhabited by faeries.

A solitary May-tree should not be cut down or damaged for fear of incurring the wrath of its guardian spirits.

There are many tales about people who encounter faery folk beneath a hawthorn - or fall asleep beneath one - and are transported to the other world, not returning for some time.

 

A solitary May-tree in the meadows at Minster Lovell, Oxfordshire (photo Tim Healey)

 

 

Taken from May Morning Oxford  

 

 

 

 

 

Comments (1)

Ann Vipond said

at 12:45 pm on May 12, 2017

I love the May Tree and I used to live not far from where these pictures were taken

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