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  • Hey there I'm Mike Rugnetta, this is Crash Course Mythology and today

  • We're continuing our round-the-world tour of mythical features of the natural world. Today we behold

  • trees and yes technically trees do appear in gardens like the ones in the Garden of Eden

  • but trees have a mythological richness all their own

  • Also they're so nice and shady they deserve an episode all to themselves. Right Thoth ?

  • He's so tranquil. Don't worry. We'll fix that

  • So, if you've been watching this series closely you'll remember some of the trees we've already met,

  • like the tree of knowledge of good and evil from Eden that was the one tree

  • Yahweh told Adam and Eve not to eat from.

  • And then they did. It's the one that hosted a serpent which told Eve to eat the knowledge Apple

  • - which might have actually been a quince or a fig or a pomegranate - and which filled Eve and Adam both with the knowledge

  • that they were naked. As you may recall that didn't work out well

  • and it's the reason we now have pain in childbirth and infinite weeding.

  • But the tree of knowledge is hardly the only

  • mythically significant tree. We've also met Yggdrasil and we're about to encounter Aswatha, two trees which contain the whole of

  • cosmology in their roots and branches

  • We've talked a bit before about Yggdrasil, the great ash tree where Odin hangs himself to learn the secret of runes

  • Between the tips of its branches and its roots exists the entire

  • Cosmos, from the beginning to the end of time Yggdrasil has three

  • Great roots one reaching to Asgard where the æsir and white elves live one to Jotunheim

  • the home of men, dark elves, dwarves and giants and the last to Niffleheim where hell the person rules over the land of the

  • dead hell the place. Yggdrasil is both a tree of knowledge and a tree of life

  • connecting and sustaining all the plains of the Norse universe. It's foretold to be one of the few things to survive

  • Ragnarok and from its bark

  • mankind will be renewed

  • Fittingly, Yggdrasil teams with life and activity. On its top branches lives an eagle and on top of that eagle a hawk.

  • Down at the base of the tree lives Nidhogg (Níðhǫggr) a

  • Dragon who gnaws on the roots of the tree and baddies on their way to hell. A naughty squirrel named Ratatosk lives among the branches

  • Carrying insults back and forth between the eagle and the dragon making them even more insulting along the way. Indian mythology also

  • Features a tree that represents the entire cosmos in the Vedas and the Upanishads we find a giant

  • Inverted tree whose roots reached to the sky and whose branches covered the earth

  • This cosmic tree Aswatha often called a Bodhi tree

  • represents Brahma the supreme a cosmic spirit in full and

  • Glorious bloom. Aswatha is further described in the Mahabharata which explains

  • "Sprung from the unmanifested arising from it only as support the tree's trunk is Bodhi

  • (enlightenment or awakening). Its inward cavities the channels of the sense the great elements its

  • branches the objects of the senses its leaves its fair flowers good and

  • evil pleasure and pain the consequent fruits. This

  • Eternal Brahma tree is the source of life for all beings."

  • Whether upside down or right side up these trees have particular structures

  • which can be interpreted as containing the entire universe while also providing delicious and

  • Occasionally dangerous snacks sometimes though these trees represent far less than the whole world or universe

  • trees are also often involved in myths about

  • personal transformation

  • And it makes sense trees have an annual cycle of change and many even seem to die and come back to life each year

  • We've already seen one tree transformation myth in the story of totes pal Osiris

  • Although that one is complicated because Osiris is entombed in a coffin

  • Which is then enclosed in a tree for another tree's formation?

  • we're heading to Greece for Daphne and Apollo the myth of Daphne and Apollo begins with Apollo making fun of

  • Eros whom you may know better as Cupid. Here's a tip though

  • Don't make fun of babies with a bow and arrow because babies with a bow and arrow are

  • Dangerous in revenge eros looses two magic arrows one of gold and one of lead. The gold one is for Apollo

  • And it makes him fall in love with the nymph Daphne. So far so cute

  • But then he shoots, Daphne with the lead arrow and as soon as Daphne sees Apollo. She is deeply and madly

  • disgusted by him Apollo pursues

  • Daphne and Daphne rejects him Apollo is persistent and Daphne keeps shooting him down mortal men might take the hint

  • But Apollo is a God and gods do not take hints before you know it Apollo is literally chasing Daphne across Greece

  • Not especially interested in the advances of a god she despises Daphne cries out to her father Finneus the river god for help

  • Asking him to make the earth swallow her up or transform her into something else

  • Both are preferable to sex with Apollo her dad goes for the transformation option turning daphne into a laurel tree

  • Apollo looks at the tree and realizes he

  • loves

  • This tree after some rather uncomfortable and unfortunate tree molesting

  • He decrees that the laurel will forever be his symbol and Daphne

  • Well, we don't know how Daphne feels about it

  • She's a tree now

  • But my guess is that she is not

  • Super thrilled with this outcome a different tree transformation myth takes us to a part of the world. We haven't visited yet

  • Vietnam. here the story of ton lung and Tao is both a transformation story and an etiological

  • story explaining a traditional Vietnamese

  • Marriage custom tun and lung are two brothers

  • They're not twins

  • But they're very very similar almost no one can tell them apart except for their friend Tao

  • The daughter of the village teacher she learns which brother is which by staring deeply into their eyes

  • she knows the older brother tun is the

  • extroverted one while the young Lung is

  • Quiet and thoughtful one day Tao realizes that tun is in love with her before she knows what to do tons parents have come to

  • Ask for Tao's hand she and her parents

  • Agree Tun and Tao are married and Tao travels to live with her new husband's family

  • Tony is happily married, but still loves his younger brother so he tries to include Lung. Tun

  • AsksLung to come on walks with him and Tao, but the younger brother always refuses

  • Tao is sensitive to the emotions of the two brothers and one day she realizes that despite his quiet exterior, Lung is

  • Deeply in love with her eventually his desires become too much to bear so he moves to a remote mountain

  • To garden and to write, and I mean hey

  • We've all been after ten days without his brother Tun is beside himself with worry and goes to search for him leaving Tao behind

  • After another 10 days Tao becomes worried and goes to search for the brothers

  • She heads to the mountains up a treacherous path to a river. That's too fast and wide to cross

  • There's no ferry and the weather is starting to turn so she knocks on the door of a nearby Hut

  • Let's find out what happens next

  • In the thought bubble inside the hut town meets a kindly old couple she asked them if they'd seen

  • Two men one dressed in white and the other in green yes

  • The old man says about a month ago my wife found a man dressed all in white sitting by the river

  • He was weeping and acting as if he was embracing someone

  • But it was only the air it began to rain so she came back to the house to fetch a rain jacket for him

  • I brought the rain jacket the old woman says and asked the man to put it on and join us in the house

  • He said nothing so I laid the jacket down beside me the next day the man in white wasn't there?

  • But where he had been sitting there was a strange white rock ten days later another man this one dressed in green

  • Came by and asked if they'd seen a man dressed in white

  • We showed him the rock and told him the story the old man says the man in green cried that his brother

  • Had turned to stone he embraced the rock and wept bitterly and when another storm came through he like his brother

  • Refused to leave the spot the next day the man in green was also gone and by the rock stood a new

  • Tree that had not been there before the tree seemed to be protecting the rock the next morning Tao

  • Goes down to the river

  • she kneels by the rock and

  • Embraces the tree crying into its leaves when the couple wakes up Tao is nowhere to be found

  • but they do find a new vine with its roots deep in the ground twisting up the tree as if

  • Embracing and supporting it and when the old couple pluck a leaf from the vine

  • It's smell reminds them the young woman who had spent the night in their Hut

  • Thanks, thought-bubble this sweet, but tragic story of love and devotion

  • Doesn't end there though one summer afternoon the king comes to the river and sits on the strange rock under the strange tree

  • Supported by the strange vine. He asks his attendant. What sort of tree

  • Is it and orders him to pick one of its fruits another attendant tells the king the story of Lung Tun and Tao?

  • Explaining the white rock represents lung pure heart the tree represents

  • Tuns attempt to protect his brother and the vine shows

  • Tao's Love for her husband the king tastes the fruit wrapped in the leaf of the vine

  • Mixed with a bit of the rock and finds the taste most agreeable strange

  • He enjoyed eating rocks

  • but afterward he declares that the love of these two brothers and the

  • married couple is so strong that it has produced a

  • Lovely fruit and from that point the fruit and the leaf and the rock would be used at marriage

  • proposals and weddings as a symbol of both love and fidelity mythological trees vary in size and

  • Meaning some are large enough to contain the whole world others are slender plants meant to represent a single young woman or man

  • deciduous trees with their cycles of birth and death

  • Lend themselves to metaphor as does their shape with branches reaching towards the sky and roots

  • Burrowing into the ground trees can live for hundreds if not thousands of years much longer than humans

  • So it makes sense that they might come to represent something greater than the relatively frail human form

  • But poignantally they also serve as a retreat for Humanity when the sorrows of

  • Unrequited love or the threat of abuse become too much to endure

  • Thanks for watching and see you next time we're gonna talk about mythical cities

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  • Crash course mythology is filmed in the chad and stacey emigholz studio in indianapolis Indiana

  • Is produced with the help of all of these very nice people our animation team is thought cafe crash course exists

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  • Thanks for watching, and if crushing despair turned me into a tree. I'd want to be groot.

Hey there I'm Mike Rugnetta, this is Crash Course Mythology and today

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