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Why Thousands Travel to a Tiny Perthshire Village Just to See a Tree

In a small Highland churchyard in Perthshire, there is a tree that was already ancient when Egypt’s pharaohs were building temples. It stood here when Romans first marched into Britain. And it is still growing today.

Photo: Shutterstock
The Fortingall Hotel, Glen Lyon, Perthshire, Scotland – Shutterstock

The Fortingall Yew is believed to be the oldest living tree in Europe. Most botanists estimate its age between 3,000 and 5,000 years. Either way, it has been standing in the quiet village of Fortingall — deep in the heart of Glen Lyon — for longer than most civilisations have existed.

And yet most visitors to Scotland have never heard of it.

A Tree Older Than the Written Word

Fortingall sits at the entrance to Glen Lyon, one of the longest and most beautiful glens in Scotland. It is a small, peaceful village — whitewashed cottages, a 19th-century church, and one extraordinary yew.

When this tree first took root, there was no written language in Britain. No kingdoms, no cathedrals, no history as we understand it. The people who first gathered beneath its branches left no records behind.

What we do know is that yew trees held deep significance for the ancient Celtic peoples of Scotland. They planted them beside burial grounds as symbols of death and rebirth. Many churches were later built next to already-ancient yews — not the other way around.

The Legend of Pontius Pilate

The most striking story attached to the Fortingall Yew is one that cannot be verified. But it has been told in this glen for centuries.

According to local tradition, Pontius Pilate — the Roman governor who sentenced Jesus to death — was born in Fortingall. The story holds that his father was a Roman envoy sent to treat with the Pictish people of Perthshire. Young Pilate, so the legend goes, spent his earliest years in the shadow of this tree.

Historians consider the tale almost certainly folklore. Rome had no formal contact with the Pictish tribes of northern Scotland at that time. But the legend persists — and it captures something true about what it feels like to stand here. This tree has genuinely witnessed fifty centuries of human history pass by.

The Tree That Changed Sex

For thousands of years, the Fortingall Yew was male — producing pollen cones rather than berries. Yew trees are almost always one or the other. Then, sometime in the late 20th century, something extraordinary happened.

A branch near the upper canopy began producing berries.

Botanists who examined it confirmed a partial sex change — an event so rare in yew trees that it attracted scientific interest from across the world. That branch still produces berries today. Scotland’s oldest tree is apparently also one of its most unpredictable.

The Price of Being Famous

The Fortingall Yew has not always been treated gently. By the early Victorian era, visitors were regularly breaking off branches and pieces of bark as souvenirs. The original trunk — once measured at more than 16 metres in circumference — was damaged and fragmented over time.

What remains today are several ancient living stems, separated where the great trunk once stood. A protective iron enclosure was eventually built around the tree by the church authorities to prevent further harm.

If the depth of Scotland’s ancient natural heritage draws you in, you may also enjoy reading about the ancient Caledonian forest Scotland nearly lost — the surviving woodlands that once blanketed much of the Highlands.

How to Visit the Fortingall Yew

Fortingall is roughly 20 miles west of Aberfeldy in Highland Perthshire. Entry is completely free. The churchyard at Fortingall Parish Church is open during daylight hours, and the yew is clearly visible from just outside its iron enclosure.

The drive through Glen Lyon is itself one of the great scenic routes in Scotland — a long, winding road through dramatic Highland landscape that most visitors never take. For more ideas on Scotland’s quieter corners, see our guide to off-the-beaten-track places in Scotland.

There is no visitor centre, no gift shop, and no fee. Just a churchyard, an iron railing, and the oldest living thing in Europe.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Fortingall Yew?

The Fortingall Yew is an ancient yew tree growing in the churchyard of Fortingall village in Highland Perthshire, Scotland. It is widely considered to be Europe’s oldest living tree, with an estimated age of between 3,000 and 5,000 years.

How old is the Fortingall Yew?

Most estimates place the tree’s age between 3,000 and 5,000 years old. This means it was already growing during the late Bronze Age — far older than any written record from Britain, and contemporary with the construction of the great stone circles at Callanish and Brodgar.

Can you visit the Fortingall Yew?

Yes, and entry is free. Fortingall Parish Church churchyard is open during daylight hours. The tree sits inside a protective iron enclosure, but you can stand directly beside it and see the ancient stems clearly.

Where is Fortingall, and how do I get there?

Fortingall is in Glen Lyon, approximately 20 miles west of Aberfeldy in Highland Perthshire. It is best reached by car. The drive through Glen Lyon is considered one of the finest scenic routes in Scotland.

Some things in Scotland are famous for their drama — their mountains, their castles, their battles. The Fortingall Yew is famous for something quieter: the simple fact of still being here. Still growing. Still changing. Having outlasted everything else around it by thousands of years.

Stand beside it long enough, and you begin to understand why people travel so far just to see a tree.

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