In 1662 C.E., an English writer and gardener named John Evelyn stood before the Royal Society in London with a warning: England’s forests were disappearing, and if nothing changed, the consequences would be catastrophic. His paper, Sylva, or A Discourse of Forest-Trees and the Propagation of Timber, was not simply a technical manual. It was a moral argument for stewardship — one of the earliest formal cases in Western history for managing natural resources rather than simply consuming them.
What the evidence shows
- Forest conservation: Evelyn’s paper, presented to the Royal Society in 1662 C.E. and published as a book in 1664 C.E., is widely cited as a founding document of the Western conservation movement, responding to the severe depletion of timber in England.
- Sylva publication: The text advocated not just for halting deforestation but for actively replanting — an idea that anticipated sustainable forestry by more than two centuries and influenced tree-planting campaigns across England for generations.
- Royal Society presentation: Evelyn’s delivery to the Royal Society gave the conservation argument institutional legitimacy, linking ecological concern to the emerging scientific community at a pivotal moment in European intellectual history.
Why the forests were vanishing
By the mid-17th century C.E., England’s oak forests — the backbone of its naval power — were under immense pressure. Shipbuilding consumed enormous quantities of timber. So did iron-smelting, glassmaking, and the heating of homes. Landowners felled trees for short-term profit with little thought for regeneration.
The Royal Navy’s long-term survival depended on a steady supply of mature timber, and that supply was drying up. Evelyn saw this not as an abstract problem but as a national emergency — and he believed science and reason could solve it.
His solution was systematic. He called for planned planting of trees on private estates and common lands, careful management of woodlands, and a cultural shift in how English society thought about its relationship to the land. The idea that forests could be cultivated — not just harvested — was genuinely new in formal Western discourse, even if farmers and foresters had practiced versions of it for centuries.
A tradition older than Evelyn
It would be a mistake to read Sylva as the origin of conservation itself. Long before Evelyn put pen to paper, Indigenous and traditional communities around the world had developed sophisticated land management practices rooted in ecological knowledge and long-term thinking.
In South Asia, the Bishnoi community had been protecting trees as an expression of religious faith since at least the 15th century C.E. In 1730 C.E., 363 Bishnoi people gave their lives to prevent soldiers from cutting down Khejri trees in the village of Khejarli — a sacrifice still commemorated annually. Their tradition of ecological care predated Evelyn’s written arguments by generations.
Across the African continent, in the Americas, and throughout East and Southeast Asia, communities regulated land use, managed forests, and protected water sources through customary law and cultural practice. The conservation movement in the Western sense codified and institutionalized many ideas that had long existed outside European intellectual circles.
Evelyn’s contribution was not invention — it was articulation within a powerful new institutional framework, at a moment when that framework could carry the idea into policy.
Lasting impact
Sylva went through multiple editions over the following decades and remained in use for well over a century. Its influence helped shape the culture of tree-planting on English estates and contributed to later formal conservation efforts in Britain and its colonies.
The conservation ethic that Evelyn helped to establish — that human activity damages the environment and that there is a duty to protect it for future generations — became the philosophical backbone of the modern conservation movement. By the 19th century C.E., those ideas had reached British India, where scientific forestry programs modeled on principles Evelyn helped popularize were applied on a national scale. The Madras Board of Revenue established what historians consider the first state-managed forest conservation program in the world in 1842 C.E.
That lineage eventually led to national parks, protected lands, and international agreements. The Convention on Biological Diversity, adopted in 1992 C.E., and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework of 2022 C.E. both rest on a philosophical foundation that includes the argument Evelyn made in 1662 C.E.: that nature has to be actively protected, not passively assumed.
Today, global tree-planting initiatives — including the Bonn Challenge, which aims to restore 350 million hectares of degraded land by 2030 C.E. — carry forward the same core logic Evelyn articulated before an audience of scientists in Restoration-era London.
Blindspots and limits
Evelyn’s conservation vision was not without its contradictions. His concern for forests was fundamentally practical — he worried about timber for ships and fuel, not about ecosystems for their own sake. The later application of his ideas in British India often served imperial economic interests, and early “scientific forestry” displaced Indigenous communities from lands they had managed sustainably for generations.
The mainstream historical narrative around conservation has also long centered European thinkers like Evelyn while largely ignoring the centuries of ecological stewardship practiced by communities whose knowledge was never written into a text presented to a royal institution. That gap in the record shapes how we still tell the story of conservation today.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Conservation movement — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights recognized across 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on conservation
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