The Green Man
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The tradition of portraying
a human face amongst or as part of leaves is a very old one in
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carving, dated 1493, on the keystone of a window of the Chapel
of the Nine Alters, Fountain’s Abbey, |
The Green Man carvings made his return to
Northern Europe in the late medieval period and first appear as carvings in |
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Some Green Men are easily visible, being found by Church doors
or on chancel screens. Others are
tucked away in corners, hidden from obvious view so that you stumble across
them unexpectedly. Some are so
high up in buildings that they can hardly be seen at all from ground level
and some are hidden behind structures. |
Rosslyn Chapel, |
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Swiss Tapestry from the 15th
Century depicting the Wilde Mann |
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The term Green Man, as applied to carvings, is actually a fairly
recent one. Historically, the term
referred to a related but separate Medieval folk tradition. This Green Man was a giant who lived
in the woods, wearing no clothes apart from a suit of leaves and whose hair
and beard were long and shaggy.
This character is actually a version of the ‘Wild Man’
(wild man of the woods), a primal figure that haunted the medieval
imagination. He was perhaps
better known on the continent than in There seems to be a connection between the Green/Wild Man of the
woods and the Green Man carvings.
Both have obvious associations with plant and woodland features and
both are likely to trace their origins back to pre-Christian folk traditions
and Gods. However, whereas the
Wild Man was always seen as somewhat threatening and not of this world, early
carvings of Green Men were of friendly, well dressed young men of the
period.
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Before researching for this
article, I had not realised the sheer number and variety of Green Men
patterns. It is not possible here
to consider every aspect of this phenomenon or to include pictures of more than
just a tiny sample. The interested
reader may wish to explore further and will discover much more about the
subject. The aim of this article
though is to give a flavour of the tradition and to try to work through the
Christo-Heathen associations of it.
Some web based resources are included at the end of the piece for those
who wish to follow it up.
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The Green Men carvings appeared in |
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One idea is that Green Men
were associated with change and transformation, symbolised by the vegetation and
allusions to the seasonal cycles of nature. Pagan transformational stories from the
classics, such as Ovid’s metamorphosis
in which Daphne turns into a laurel tree, would have been known by the
better educated. Strangely, their
own similar ancestral myths would have been much less familiar to them. Nevertheless, it is possible that the
Green Men carvings were used in some way to give a Christian moral to these
pagan transformational stories.
It may be that the foliage and tendrils coming out of the mouth
represented the expunging of sin from the soul. On this font at Lullington church in
Somerset, a ring of four cats’ heads sprout foliage above a Latin
inscription which says ‘in this holy bowl sins are washed from the
soul’ – not sure if the Latin rhymed too! It is not known what the symbolism of
the cat is, though there is an old medieval tradition that equates cats with
the Holy Mother, perhaps reflecting their association with Freya.
Priests and clerics of the
time wrote about the leaves signifying sins of the flesh and preachers warned
against the temptations of the springtime.
This seems a perversion of the original heathen view of spring as a time
of renewal and growth and the associations of leaves and flowers with
this. Luckily not everyone listened
to the preachers – even back then!
In May people carried home branches of hawthorn and young couples
strolled in the woods wearing garlands of ivy on their heads. Green Men shared in this symbolism. For instance, carvings at Weston Longville
church in
However, despite this
springtime symbolism, Green Men are usually depicted as an emblem of
autumn. The hawthorn trees are
accompanied by fruit rather than flowers.
This Green Man at Sutton Benger church in Wiltshire provides hawthorn
berries for the birds.

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From the Chapter House at Wells Cathedral, |
Green Men are especially associated with trees and
woodland. Whilst the Christians of
the Middle Ages would probably not have made overt associations with heathen
Gods, he can be seen to symbolise Ingeld who is often depicted as a woodland
God and who is associated with fertility, renewal and the natural world. In this sense, he can be seen along
with other folk traditions with heathen origins, such as John Barleycorn and
the May Day celebrations. But he
also has strong associations with Woden and Herne the Hunter too, especially
when one considers the related folk belief of the Wild Man of the Woods which
may have ancient connections to the Wild Hunt led by Woden. However, for me at least the strongest
connections to our native faith is the Ingeld (or Ing Freyr) who is most
closely associated with woodland and the seasonal cycles of nature. |
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Medieval churches were richly decorated, including bright greens
and gold – the colours of growth.
Rich colours were important to the people of this time because they
were so difficult and expensive to make.
The Green Man himself would often be represented in a human colour
rather than green – though there are examples of this. Carvings of two children in a church
at Woolpit in |
From a 14th
Century roof boss carving at |
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Some Green Men are friendly looking and others are anything
but. Some scowl ferociously whilst
others smile with such cold eyes they could be demons. Indeed, the devil is depicted as a
Green Man at Cartmel Priory in |
Whilst some green men are
frightening, others are more afraid.
Medieval people were familiar with sudden and often violent death and
terrible epidemics. After the Black
Death Green Men began to be portrayed in horrific forms, such as the one below
at Ottery St Mary in
Tendrils sprout out of his eyes lies
worms in a decaying corpse. In
practice, this is probably just the work of artists affected by the horror of
the plague rather like modern artists such as Francis Bacon’s work was
affected by the horrors of modern warfare.
It is hard to escape though, the heathen significance of decay in autumn
leading to the transformation and renewal of spring. Taken in this context, the Green Man is
truly depicting the birth, death, rebirth cycle which lies at the heart of
heathen religion.
This carving from South
Tawnton church in

BUT
ON A HAPPIER NOTE!
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The picture below is of a festive Green Man presiding over May
Day celebrations at Clun in
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In recent times there has been something of a resurgence of
interest in the Green Man, perhaps as part of the revival of folk traditions in
general and perhaps in part a revival of pagan religion. English folk dancing, especially the
Morris tradition, has a strong tradition of the woodland God. The Green Man is a common name for pubs in |
And, of course, no
discussion of the Green Man can be complete without a reference to dear old
Treebeard – the Ent of Lord of the Rings. Ents were sort of tree herders, woodland
beings (literally Giants) who looked after the forest. The association with the old woodland
Gods is again very powerful.

Links
to Green Men sites:
http://www.canterburygreenman.fsnet.co.uk/
http://website.lineone.net/~dominicow/
http://www.england-in-particular.info/greenman/gr-index.html
http://www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk/
http://website.lineone.net/~dominicow/
please note that
these sites are unconnected to the
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