mirror of https://github.com/yewstack/yew
318 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
318 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
Taxonomy and naming
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The word yew is from Proto-Germanic, possibly originally a loanword from Gaulish.
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In German it is known as Eibe. Baccata is Latin for bearing berries.
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The word yew as it was originally used seems to refer to the color brown.
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The yew was known to Theophrastus, who noted its preference for mountain coolness and shade,
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its evergreen character and its slow growth.
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Most Romance languages, with the notable exception of French,
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kept a version of the Latin word taxus from the same root as toxic.
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In Slavic languages, the same root is preserved.
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In Iran, the tree is known as sorkhdār.
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The common yew was one of the many species first described by Linnaeus.
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It is one of around 30 conifer species in seven genera in the family Taxaceae, which is placed in the order Pinales.
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Description
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It is a small to medium-sized evergreen tree, growing 10 to 20 metres tall, with a trunk up to 2 metres in diameter.
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The bark is thin, scaly brown, coming off in small flakes aligned with the stem.
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The leaves are flat, dark green, 1 to 4 centimetres long and 2 to 3 millimetres broad, arranged spirally on the stem,
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but with the leaf bases twisted to align the leaves in two flat rows either side of the stem,
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except on erect leading shoots where the spiral arrangement is more obvious.
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The leaves are poisonous.
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The seed cones are modified, each cone containing a single seed, which is 4 to 7 millimetres long,
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and partly surrounded by a fleshy scale which develops into a soft, bright red berry-like structure called an aril.
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The aril is 8 to 15 millimetres long and wide and open at the end.
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The arils mature 6 to 9 months after pollination, and with the seed contained,
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are eaten by thrushes, waxwings and other birds, which disperse the hard seeds undamaged in their droppings.
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Maturation of the arils is spread over 2 to 3 months, increasing the chances of successful seed dispersal.
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The seeds themselves are poisonous and bitter, but are opened and eaten by some bird species including hawfinches,
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greenfinches and great tits.
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The aril is not poisonous, it is gelatinous and very sweet tasting. The male cones are globose,
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3–6 millimetres in diameter, and shed their pollen in early spring.
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The yew is mostly dioecious, but occasional individuals can be variably monoecious, or change sex with time.
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Longevity
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Taxus baccata can reach 400 to 600 years of age.
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Some specimens live longer but the age of yews is often overestimated.
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Ten yews in Britain are believed to predate the 10th century.
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The potential age of yews is impossible to determine accurately and is subject to much dispute.
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There is rarely any wood as old as the entire tree, while the boughs themselves often become hollow with age,
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making ring counts impossible.
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Evidence based on growth rates and archaeological work of surrounding structures suggests the oldest yews,
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such as the Fortingall Yew in Perthshire, Scotland, may be in the range of 2,000 years,
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placing them among the oldest plants in Europe.
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One characteristic contributing to yew's longevity is that it is able to split under the weight of advanced growth
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without succumbing to disease in the fracture, as do most other trees. Another is its ability to give rise to new
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epicormic and basal shoots from cut surfaces and low on its trunk, even at an old age.
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Significant trees
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The Fortingall Yew in Perthshire, Scotland,
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has the largest recorded trunk girth in Britain and experts estimate it to be 2,000 to 3,000 years old,
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although it may be a remnant of a post-Roman Christian site and around 1,500 years old.
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The Llangernyw Yew in Clwyd, Wales, can be found at an early saint site and is about 1,500 years old.
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Other well known yews include the Ankerwycke Yew, the Balderschwang Yew, the Caesarsboom, the Florence Court Yew,
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and the Borrowdale Fraternal Four, of which poet William Wordsworth wrote.
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The Kingley Vale National Nature Reserve in West Sussex has one of Europe's largest yew woodlands.
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The oldest specimen in Spain is located in Bermiego, Asturias. It is known as Teixu l'Iglesia in the Asturian language.
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It stands 15m tall with a trunk diameter of 7m and a crown diameter of 15m.
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It was declared a Natural Monument on April 27,
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1995 by the Asturian Government and is protected by the Plan of Natural Resources.
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A unique forest formed by Taxus baccata and European box lies within the city of Sochi, in the Western Caucasus.
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The oldest Irish Yew, the Florence Court Yew, still stands in the grounds of Florence Court estate in County Fermanagh,
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Northern Ireland.
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The Irish Yew has become ubiquitous in cemeteries across the world and it is believed that all known examples are from
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cuttings from this tree.
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Toxicity
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The entire yew bush, except the aril, is poisonous.
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It is toxic due to a group of chemicals called taxine alkaloids.
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Their cardiotoxicity is well known and act via calcium and sodium channel antagonism, causing an increase in
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cytoplasmic calcium currents of the myocardial cells.
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The seeds contain the highest concentrations of these alkaloids. If any leaves or seeds of the plant are ingested,
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urgent medical advice is recommended as well as observation for at least 6 hours after the point of ingestion.
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The most cardiotoxic taxine is Taxine B followed by Taxine A.
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Taxine B also happens to be the most common alkaloid in the Taxus species.
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Yew poisonings are relatively common in both domestic and wild animals who consume the plant accidentally,
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resulting in countless fatalities in livestock.
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The taxine alkaloids are absorbed quickly from the intestine and in high enough quantities can cause death due to
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cardiac arrest or respiratory failure.
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Taxines are also absorbed efficiently via the skin and Taxus species should thus be handled with care and preferably
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with gloves.
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Taxus baccata leaves contain approximately 5mg of taxines per 1g of leaves.
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The estimated lethal dose of taxine alkaloids is approximately 3.0mg/kg body weight for humans.
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The lethal dose for an adult is reported to be 50g of yew needles.
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Patients who ingest a lethal dose frequently die due to cardiogenic shock, in spite of resuscitation efforts.
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There are currently no known antidotes for yew poisoning,
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but drugs such as atropine have been used to treat the symptoms.
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Taxine remains in the plant all year, with maximal concentrations appearing during the winter.
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Dried yew plant material retains its toxicity for several months and even increases its toxicity as the water is removed.
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Fallen leaves should therefore also be considered toxic.
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Poisoning usually occurs when leaves of yew trees are eaten,
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but in at least one case a victim inhaled sawdust from a yew tree.
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It is difficult to measure taxine alkaloids and this is a major reason as to why different studies show different results.
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Several studies have found taxine LD50 values under 20mg/kg in mice and rats.
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Male and monoecious yews in this genus release toxic pollen, which can cause the mild symptoms.
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The pollen is also a trigger for asthma.
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These pollen grains are only 15 microns in size, and can easily pass through most window screens.
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Allergenic potential
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Yews in this genus are primarily separate-sexed, and males are extremely allergenic,
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with an OPALS allergy scale rating of 10 out of 10.
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Completely female yews have an OPALS rating of 1, and are considered allergy-fighting.
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Male yews bloom and release abundant amounts of pollen in the spring;
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completely female yews only trap pollen while producing none.
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Uses and traditions
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In the ancient Celtic world, the yew tree had extraordinary importance; a passage by Caesar narrates that Cativolcus,
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chief of the Eburones poisoned himself with yew rather than submit to Rome.
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Similarly, Florus notes that when the Cantabrians were under siege by the legate Gaius Furnius in 22 BC,
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most of them took their lives either by the sword, by fire, or by a poison extracted ex arboribus taxeis, that is,
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from the yew tree.
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In a similar way, Orosius notes that when the Astures were besieged at Mons Medullius,
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they preferred to die by their own swords or by the yew tree poison rather than surrender.
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The word York is derived from the Brittonic name Eburākon,
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a combination of eburos "yew-tree" and a suffix of appurtenance meaning either "place of the yew trees";
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or alternatively, "the settlement of Eburos".
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The name Eboracum became the Anglian Eoforwic in the 7th century.
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When the Danish army conquered the city in 866, its name became Jórvík.
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The Old French and Norman name of the city following the Norman Conquest was recorded as Everwic in works such as
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Wace's Roman de Rou.
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Jórvík, meanwhile, gradually reduced to York in the centuries after the Conquest,
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moving from the Middle English Yerk in the 14th century through Yourke in the 16th century to Yarke in the 17th century.
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The form York was first recorded in the 13th century. Many company and place names, such as the Ebor race meeting,
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refer to the Latinised Brittonic, Roman name.
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The 12th‑century chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth, in his fictional account of the prehistoric kings of Britain,
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Historia Regum Britanniae, suggests the name derives from that of a pre-Roman city founded by the legendary king Ebraucus.
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The Archbishop of York uses Ebor as his surname in his signature.
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The area of Ydre in the South Swedish highlands is interpreted to mean place of yews.
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Two localities in particular, Idhult and Idebo, appear to be further associated with yews.
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Religion
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The yew is traditionally and regularly found in churchyards in England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland and Northern France.
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Some examples can be found in La Haye-de-Routot or La Lande-Patry.
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It is said up to 40 people could stand inside one of the La-Haye-de-Routot yew trees,
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and the Le Ménil-Ciboult yew is probably the largest at 13m diameter.
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Yews may grow to become exceptionally large and may live to be over 2,000 years old.
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Sometimes monks planted yews in the middle of their cloister, as at Muckross Abbey or abbaye de Jumièges.
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Some ancient yew trees are located at St. Mary the Virgin Church, Overton-on-Dee in Wales.
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In Asturian tradition and culture, the yew tree was considered to be linked with the land, people,
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ancestors and ancient religion. It was tradition on All Saints' Day to bring a branch of a yew tree to the tombs of
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those who had died recently so they would be guided in their return to the Land of Shadows.
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The yew tree has been found near chapels,
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churches and cemeteries since ancient times as a symbol of the transcendence of death.
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They are often found in the main squares of villages where people celebrated the open councils that served as a way of
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general assembly to rule village affairs.
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It has been suggested that the sacred tree at the Temple at Uppsala was an ancient yew tree.
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The Christian church commonly found it expedient to take over existing pre-Christian sacred sites for churches.
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It has also been suggested that yews were planted at religious sites as their long life was suggestive of eternity,
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or because, being toxic when ingested, they were seen as trees of death.
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Another suggested explanation is that yews were planted to discourage farmers and drovers from letting animals wander
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onto the burial grounds, the poisonous foliage being the disincentive.
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A further possible reason is that fronds and branches of yew were often used as a substitute for palms on Palm Sunday.
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Some yew trees were actually native to the sites before the churches were built.
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King Edward I of England ordered yew trees to be planted in churchyards to offer some protection to the buildings.
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Yews are poisonous so by planting them in the churchyards cattle that were not allowed to graze on hallowed
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ground were safe from eating yew. Yew branches touching the ground take root and sprout again;
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this became a symbol of death, rebirth and therefore immortality.
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In interpretations of Norse cosmology, the tree Yggdrasil has traditionally been interpreted as a giant ash tree.
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Some scholars now believe errors were made in past interpretations of the ancient writings,
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and that the tree is most likely a European yew.
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In the Crann Ogham—the variation on the ancient Irish Ogham alphabet which consists of a list of trees—yew
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is the last in the main list of 20 trees, primarily symbolizing death.
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There are stories of people who have committed suicide by ingesting the foliage.
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As the ancient Celts also believed in the transmigration of the soul,
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there is in some cases a secondary meaning of the eternal soul that survives death to be reborn in a new form.
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Medical
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Certain compounds found in the bark of yew trees were discovered by Wall and Wani in 1967 to have efficacy as
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anti-cancer agents.
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The precursors of the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel were later shown to be synthesized easily from extracts
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of the leaves of European yew, which is a much more renewable source than the bark of the Pacific yew from which
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they were initially isolated.
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This ended a point of conflict in the early 1990s; many environmentalists,
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including Al Gore, had opposed the destructive harvesting of Pacific yew for paclitaxel cancer treatments.
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Docetaxel can then be obtained by semi-synthetic conversion from the precursors.
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Woodworking and longbows
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Wood from the yew is classified as a closed-pore softwood, similar to cedar and pine.
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Easy to work, yew is among the hardest of the softwoods; yet it possesses a remarkable elasticity,
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making it ideal for products that require springiness, such as bows.
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Due to all parts of the yew and its volatile oils being poisonous and cardiotoxic,
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a mask should be worn if one comes in contact with sawdust from the wood.
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One of the world's oldest surviving wooden artifacts is a Clactonian yew spear head, found in 1911 at Clacton-on-Sea,
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in Essex, UK. Known as the Clacton Spear, it is estimated to be over 400,000 years old.
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Yew is also associated with Wales and England because of the longbow,
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an early weapon of war developed in northern Europe,
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and as the English longbow the basis for a medieval tactical system.
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The oldest surviving yew longbow was found at Rotten Bottom in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.
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It has been given a calibrated radiocarbon date of 4040 BC to 3640 BC and is on display in the National Museum of
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Scotland. Yew is the wood of choice for longbow making;
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the heartwood is always on the inside of the bow with the sapwood on the outside.
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This makes most efficient use of their properties as heartwood is best in compression whilst
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sapwood is superior in tension.
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However, much yew is knotty and twisted, and therefore unsuitable for bowmaking;
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most trunks do not give good staves and even in a good trunk much wood has to be discarded.
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There was a tradition of planting yew trees in churchyards throughout Britain and Ireland, among other reasons,
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as a resource for bows.
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Ardchattan Priory whose yew trees, according to other accounts,
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were inspected by Robert the Bruce and cut to make at least some of the longbows used at the Battle of Bannockburn.
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The trade of yew wood to England for longbows was so robust that it depleted the stocks of good-quality,
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mature yew over a vast area.
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The first documented import of yew bowstaves to England was in 1294.
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In 1423 the Polish king commanded protection of yews in order to cut exports,
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facing nearly complete destruction of local yew stock. In 1470 compulsory archery practice was renewed, and hazel, ash,
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and laburnum were specifically allowed for practice bows.
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Supplies still proved insufficient, until by the Statute of Westminster in 1472,
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every ship coming to an English port had to bring four bowstaves for every tun.
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Richard III of England increased this to ten for every tun. This stimulated a vast network of extraction and supply,
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which formed part of royal monopolies in southern Germany and Austria.
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In 1483, the price of bowstaves rose from two to eight pounds per hundred,
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and in 1510 the Venetians would only sell a hundred for sixteen pounds.
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In 1507 the Holy Roman Emperor asked the Duke of Bavaria to stop cutting yew, but the trade was profitable,
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and in 1532 the royal monopoly was granted for the usual quantity if there are that many.
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In 1562, the Bavarian government sent a long plea to the Holy Roman Emperor asking him to stop the cutting of yew,
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and outlining the damage done to the forests by its selective extraction,
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which broke the canopy and allowed wind to destroy neighbouring trees. In 1568, despite a request from Saxony,
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no royal monopoly was granted because there was no yew to cut,
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and the next year Bavaria and Austria similarly failed to produce enough yew to justify a royal monopoly.
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Forestry records in this area in the 17th century do not mention yew, and it seems that no mature trees were to be had.
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The English tried to obtain supplies from the Baltic, but at this period bows were being replaced by guns in any case.
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Horticulture
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Today European yew is widely used in landscaping and ornamental horticulture.
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Due to its dense, dark green, mature foliage, and its tolerance of even very severe pruning,
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it is used especially for formal hedges and topiary.
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Its relatively slow growth rate means that in such situations it needs to be clipped only once per year.
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Well over 200 cultivars of T. baccata have been named. The most popular of these are the Irish yew,
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a fastigiate cultivar of the European yew selected from two trees found growing in Ireland,
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and the several cultivars with yellow leaves, collectively known as golden yew. In some locations,
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when hemmed in by buildings or other trees,
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an Irish yew can reach 20 feet in height without exceeding 2 feet in diameter at its thickest point,
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although with age many Irish yews assume a fat cigar shape rather than being truly columnar.
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European yew will tolerate growing in a wide range of soils and situations, including shallow chalk soils and shade,
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although in deep shade its foliage may be less dense.
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However it cannot tolerate waterlogging,
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and in poorly-draining situations is liable to succumb to the root-rotting pathogen Phytophthora cinnamomi.
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In Europe, Taxus baccata grows naturally north to Molde in southern Norway, but it is used in gardens further north.
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It is also popular as a bonsai in many parts of Europe and makes a handsome small- to large-sized bonsai.
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Privies
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In England, yew has historically been sometimes associated with privies,
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possibly because the smell of the plant keeps insects away.
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Musical instruments
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The late Robert Lundberg, a noted luthier who performed extensive research on historical lute-making methodology,
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states in his 2002 book Historical Lute Construction that yew was historically a prized wood for lute construction.
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European legislation establishing use limits and requirements for yew limited supplies available to luthiers,
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but it was apparently as prized among medieval, renaissance,
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and baroque lute builders as Brazilian rosewood is among contemporary guitar-makers for its quality of sound and beauty.
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Conservation
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Clippings from ancient specimens in the UK, including the Fortingall Yew,
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were taken to the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh to form a mile-long hedge.
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The purpose of this project is to maintain the DNA of Taxus baccata.
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The species is threatened by felling, partly due to rising demand from pharmaceutical companies, and disease.
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Another conservation programme was run in Catalonia in the early 2010s, by the Forest Sciences Centre of Catalonia,
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in order to protect genetically endemic yew populations, and preserve them from overgrazing and forest fires.
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In the framework of this programme, the 4th International Yew Conference was organised in the Poblet Monastery in 2014,
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which proceedings are available.
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There has also been a conservation programme in northern Portugal and Northern Spain.
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