- January 5, 2005
Glastonbury Abbey in Glastonbury, Somerset, England, now presents itself as traditionally the oldest above-ground Christian church in the world situated in the mystical land of Avalon by dating the founding of the community of monks at A.D. 63, the legendary visit of Joseph of Arimathea, who was supposed to have brought the Holy Grail and planted the Glastonbury Thorn. Even the skeptic finds much else to admire about Glastonburys evocative ruins and its splendid documented history.
A specimen of Common Hawthorn found at Glastonbury, first mentioned in an early 16th century anonymous metrical Lyfe of Joseph of Arimathea, was unusual in that it flowered twice in a year, once as normal on old wood in spring, and once on new wood (the current seasons matured new growth) in the winter. This flowering of the Glastonbury Thorn in mild weather just past midwinter was accounted miraculous.
At the time of the adoption of the revised Gregorian calendar in Britain in 1752, the Gentlemans Magazine reported that curious visitors went to see whether the Glastonbury Thorn kept to the Julian calendar or the new one:
Glastonbury.—A vast concourse of people attended the noted thorn on Christmas-day, new style; but, to their great disappointment, there was no appearance of its blowing, which made them watch it narrowly the 5th of January, the Christmas-day, old style, when it blowed as usual.
—Gentlemans Magazine January 1753
This tree has been widely propagated by grafting or cuttings, with the cultivar name Biflora or Praecox. An early antiquarian account by Mr Eyston was given in Hearses History and Antiquities of Glastonbury, 1722 : There is a person about Glastonbury who has a nursery of them, who, Mr. Paschal tells us he is informed, sells them for a crown a piece, or as he can get. [1] The present sacred thorn tree at the Church of St John, Glastonbury was grown from a local cutting, like many others in the neighborhood of Glastonbury.