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  2. List of plants with symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_with_symbolism

    Various folk cultures and traditions assign symbolic meanings to plants. Although these are no longer commonly understood by populations that are increasingly divorced from their rural traditions, some meanings survive. In addition, these meanings are alluded to in older pictures, songs and writings.

  3. Trees in Chinese mythology and cultural symbology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trees_in_Chinese_mythology...

    Trees in Chinese mythology and culture tend to range from more-or-less mythological such as the Fusang tree and the Peaches of Immortality cultivated by Xi Wangmu to mythological attributions to such well-known trees, such as the pine, the cypress, the plum and other types of prunus, the jujube, the cassia, and certain as yet unidentified trees.

  4. Trees in mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trees_in_mythology

    Trees are significant in many of the world's mythologies, and have been given deep and sacred meanings throughout the ages. Human beings, observing the growth and death of trees , and the annual death and revival of their foliage, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] have often seen them as powerful symbols of growth, death and rebirth.

  5. Chinese garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_garden

    The Chinese garden is a landscape garden style which has evolved over three thousand years. It includes both the vast gardens of the Chinese emperors and members of the imperial family, built for pleasure and to impress, and the more intimate gardens created by scholars, poets, former government officials, soldiers and merchants, made for reflection and escape from the outside world.

  6. Three Friends of Winter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Friends_of_Winter

    The Three Friends of Winter is an art motif that comprises the pine, bamboo, and plum. [1] The Chinese celebrated the pine (松), bamboo (竹) and Chinese flowering plum (梅) together, for they observed that unlike many other plants these plants do not wither as the cold days deepen into the winter season. [2]

  7. Botanists may have worked out why pine trees suddenly died ...

    www.aol.com/botanists-may-worked-why-pine...

    Chinese botanists say they may have an explanation for a mass die-off of plantation pine trees across the country that has baffled scientists for 50 years - it could be all in the genes.The Pinus ...

  8. How Did Evergreen Trees Become a Christmas Symbol?

    www.aol.com/did-evergreen-trees-become-christmas...

    But, Christmas trees as we know them, began in 16th century Germany, when devout Christians brought dressed evergreen trees into their homes. And when early German settlers eventually landed in ...

  9. Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_trees_and_groves_in...

    He made his home at Lund [Old Norse 'grove'], and held the grove sacred. [14] Sacred trees and groves leave few archaeological traces, but two such sites may have been identified, both in Sweden. A mouldering birch stump surrounded by animal bones, especially from brown bear and pig, was discovered under the church on Frösön in Jämtland in 1984.