Legend & History

Legend & History

Legend

Legend
There are many legends and myths that have come to pass throughout the existence of the Empress. The most notorious is the one about the planting of an Empress on the birth of a Daughter to bring good luck to the new family. These legends and other stories of its amazing growth characteristics and other properties makes it no wonder why it is such an intricate part of the Chinese and Japanese cultures, and why it is becoming so popular in the West today.

Earliest Record

There are many legends about the magnificent Empress Splendor™ Tree, the first one was written over three thousand years ago! The Erh-ya, a Chinese encyclopedia of natural and cultural objects contains the earliest written record of the Empress Splendor™ Tree. Around 1000 B.C., the Erh-ya praises the Empress Splendor™ with reference to its beauty and the "glorious Empress Splendor™ wood." It is the only known record of the prehistoric Chinese lore of natural history and is greatly attributed to Chou Kung, duke of Chou and the son of the first ruler of the Chou Dynasty
Although the Empress is a native of China it quickly became an important part of another ancient culture when it was introduced to Japan. The Japanese people embraced this sacred tree and set about discovering the many uses of Empress. The Empress Splendor™ wood survived repeated drying and soaking, and was even reported in a manuscript dating as far back as 1049 A.D. that the wood of the Empress Splendor™ lasts longer than pine, fir, or oak!

Empress Splendor™ unique qualities The unique qualities of this wood made it suitable for a vast array of objects in their culture. Besides furniture, beams and pillars in houses, ornamental carvings, wooden bowls and spoons, the Empress Splendor™ wood also found itself being used for musical instruments because of it’s incredible resonant qualities.

Westerners first learned about the Empress when Swedish botanist Karl P. Thunberg documented it on a visit to Japan in the 1770s. It was named in honor of Anna Paulownia, the granddaughter of Catherine the Great and wife of Willem II, king of the Netherlands from 1840 to 1849. From its association with her, the Empress also gets its popular name, the princess, or empress tree.
 

Birth and Betrothal

Perhaps the best example of respect for the Empress Splendor™, however, is the tree's link to the ritual of marriage. On the occasion of the birth of a daughter, the father would plant an Empress Splendor™. The tree grows quickly-as much as 16 feet a year-and by the end of a decade can reach a height of 40 feet. When the daughter was betrothed, the Empress Splendor™ was felled and the lumber used to make a tansu, or dowry chest. The other parts of the tree were also used to make furniture, ornaments, musical instruments and decorator items for the extended family. Finally, the toppings of the tree were used for firewood and ground cover. With every part of the tree put to use, it was thought to bring "Good Fortune" to the house and all who entered. The tradition thrived until the 1970s, when blight wiped out the Japanese Empress.
 

Good Fortune

Since the end of World War II, the Chinese have credited the "economic recovery' of the lumber industry in their country to the "Good Fortune" of the Empress tree. They have continued to plant the Empress tree and in the past five years alone, have planted over 1. 2 billion trees for agro forestry and lumber production.
Empress Splendor™ Costumer Empress Splendor™ Costumer
 

The Phoenix

According to Chinese legend, the tree was an omen of good fortune because of its association with the phoenix, a mythical bird that regenerated itself in fire. The phoenix must have been as picky as a pampered cat of today, because it would alight in only the very choicest of Empress trees and appear only when a benevolent ruler was in power. The Empress Splendor™ thus was cultivated extensively to encourage the appearance of the phoenix. Today, the tree's bark, wood, flowers, fruits, and leaves still are used in traditional Chinese medicine to promote growth of hair, darken graying hair, reduce swelling in the feet, heal bruises, and treat patients suffering from hallucinations and delirium.
The Empress Splendor™ was cultivated extensively to encourage the appearance of the phoenix
 

The Thundering Fish

In China, uncultivated Empress grow only in very remote temperate regions, primarily in open, marginal areas of forests, where they share habitat with such "living fossil' trees as the ginkgo and sequoia (which can be seen in the Zoo's Beaver Valley). In the past, these regions were also home to isolated communities of Taoist and Buddhist monks, whose members were well versed in the natural history of their surroundings. Centuries ago, a monk carved a fish from the wood of an Empress. The carving, which produced a deep, thunderlike sound when struck with a stick, was hung just inside a temple gate and used as a bell to summon the monks and to scare away evil demons. Today, a fish-shaped Empress bell still is used in many Buddhist monasteries to summon the monks and keep the evil demons away.
 

Chun-Tzu: Of Complete Virtue

The Empress Splendor™ has continued to hold special meaning for the Chinese even into recent times. Before Mao Tsetung came to power, Chinese intellectuals gathered for companionship in groves of Empress Splendor™. An educated Chinese aspired to become chun-tzu, a man of complete virtue. Because the living Empress Splendor™ has soft, brittle wood that becomes hard and strong after it is cut, the Chinese considered the tree to have a tender heart and steady character, the very essence of chun-tzu.
 

Order of the Empress Sun

The Empress became so revered in Japan that its leaves and flowers were incorporated into the Order of the Empress Sun established in 1888 by Emperor Meiji. The honor is bestowed on those who have demonstrated outstanding civil or military merit. Generally awarded to high-ranking diplomats, generals, and admirals, and the highest honor Japan can bestow on a foreigner, it was presented to General Douglas Macarthur in 1960.
Empress Splendor™ Flowers
 
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