Environmental Studies Certificate Program (EN)
print


Breadcrumb Navigation


Content

Trees as Symbol and Companions of Human Life

The cosmic tree as a connection between the spheres and how it encounters us in everyday life

01.10.2021

By Maria Ramisch
Supervisor: Dr. Gesa Lüdecke


We are born into a world of the same nature, separate from each other and yet one. In the end,
everybody disintegrates again into the one matter from which they originated and from which
in turn new bodies will come into being. Birth, life and death are indispensably linked to each
other. As omnipresent companions of human life, trees symbolize this connection between the
spheres of being, reflected in the form: just as the crown reaches into the sky, the root system
weaves into the earth, connected by the trunk, through which the life forces circulate from
below to above and vice versa. Seasonal changes mirror life cycles. Thus, in many societies
around the globe, trees represent a central element of the interpretation of the world.

Sketch of Yggdrasil

Sketch of Yggdrasil

In Norse mythology, the first humans are formed out of tree trunks. Yggdrasil, the evergreen
world tree, binds the cosmos with its nine branches in heaven, three roots in the underworld
and the plane of earthly, embodied being in the middle. The almost universal and continuous
importance of tree symbolism shows in the transition to Christianity, for example in the
depiction of "tree crosses."

 

Maypole, Thalkirchen - Munich  Tree as a burial site, cemetery Solln - Munich

Maypole, Thalkirchen - Munich                                                 Tree as a burial site, cemetery Solln - Munich

Like this, we meet the world tree in various forms in everyday scenes of social life. Yggdrasil
appears in film and music, the maypole as a traditional element can be interpreted as a fertility
symbol. Trees also function as a workplace, such as for landscapers, and after working you sit
together under shady treetops in the Biergarten. In cemeteries, trees act as a thriving
environment for flora and fauna, as a bridge between this world and the hereafter or directly
as burial sites. Here the connection of the spheres is directly noticeable: The sky-reaching
branches are nourished by the earth beneath, where the bodies of the deceased return to the
one matter of which everything is made.


This personal view on the all-embracing theme is illustrated in the form of an essay with
mythological-spiritual focus and own sketches, photographs, interviews and observations.
Each viewer should feel invited to fill the corner points with their own impressions of the
world tree as a companion to the individual path through life.


Service