E2024-G117

광주문화예술인문스토리플랫폼
이동: 둘러보기, 검색

Village Guardians: Local Trees and Shrines

Narrative

Traditionally, villages were considered to have a village guardian deity who was often embodied by a large, old tree, grove, or sometimes a guardian post, at the entrance or center of the village. Gwangju has many such village guardian trees and village guardian rituals. A shrine for the local guardian deity was often made near the tree, and offerings and prayers were made to the tree on holidays in the form of veneration rituals. These such village guardian rituals continue to be held in Gwangju today, including those in saw-leaf zelkova in Hak-dong, the ritual for the gingko in Chilseok-dong, the ritual for the saw-leaf zelkova in Chunghyo-dong, and the ritual for the saw-leaf zelkova on Mudeungsan Mountain, with many of the trees protected by the local government as Protected Trees of Gwangju or Gwangju Monuments. These trees and their related rituals attest to Korean folk religion’s roots in nature and community.

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