Yew (Taxus baccata) long found in British churchyards, partly because Christian churches were constructed on ancient worship sites where yew was planted as a symbol but also to ensure parishes had wood available to make long bows, vital to medieval English military success. Yew also gave its name to many English towns including York.
Yew wood is among the hardest of “softwood’ timbers, easy to work with remarkable elasticity, perfect for items needing springiness, including bows. A 400,000 year old yew spearhead is amongst the oldest wooden artifacts known to exist and the oldest yew longbow has been dated to 4040BCE - 3640BCE.
By 1294, yew bowstaves were being imported into Britain because of inadequate local supply of timber. The Statute of Westminster of 1472 required every ship coming to England to provide four yew bow staves for every tun of imported material.
A tun was a measure of liquid-wines, oils and honey- so effectively this was a wine tax! Richard III, reigned 1483-1485, raised this to 10 bow staves per tun. Yew resultantly became scarce throughout European forests and the price increased, from 2 pounds per hundred in 1483 to 8 pounds per hundred and by 1510 Venetian traders would only sell 100 bowstaves for 16 pounds. Eventually there were no yew staves to be had but by then guns were being introduced into war!
Today Yew forests are once more under siege from pharmaceutical companies seeking to use extracts from European Yew to provide anti-cancer drugs first identified in the rarer and slower growing Pacific Yew (Taxus brevifolia). Identification of a semi-synthetic pathway has allowed extracts from the foliage of other Yews to replace this species.