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A01=Fred Hageneder
A23=David Bellamy
A23=Robert Hardy
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ancient
artefacts
Author_Fred Hageneder
automatic-update
botantical
botany
bows
cancer
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=WNP
clacton
conifer
continents
COP=United Kingdom
county wicklow
cultural history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
folklore
fruit
greystones
habitat
Language_English
longbow
medicine
medieval
modern medicine
musical instruments
mythology
nature
PA=Available
paclitaxel
pipes
poisonous
prehistoric
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
religion
renew
roots
scarlet berries|berries
softlaunch
spears
taxol
taxus genus|oldest living thing
treatment
tree
trunk
warfare
wood
yew tree

Product details

  • ISBN 9780752459455
  • Weight: 980g
  • Dimensions: 200 x 260mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Apr 2011
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The yew is one of the most fascinating and versatile life forms on Earth, botanically rich and intriguing, and culturally almost without comparison. In history, mythology, religion, folklore, medicine and warfare, this tree bears timeless witness to a deep relationship with mankind. Yew was the wood chosen to make some of mankind's oldest artefacts: spears, bows and musical instruments. These include items like the prehistoric spear found near Clacton, the 2,000-year-old wooden pipes from Greystones, County Wicklow and, of course, the famous medieval English longbow. In modern medicine, too, yew has proved a boon. Since 1992 taxol/paclitaxel has helped revolutionise the treatment of certain types of cancer. In botanical terms, yew is a mass of contradictions. It is a conifer which bears scarlet 'berries' with sweet juicy pulp instead of cones. It is highly poisonous in all its parts except the red fruit pulp, and yet both wild and domesticated animals feed upon it. It can live for thousands of years with the potential to renew itself. A new tree from an interior root can grow slowly within the hollow trunk of an ancient yew and centuries later 'take over' the older tree.

When it comes to habitat, the yew tree is nothing if not versatile. It can grown on different continents at a wide range of altitudes: from rainy Edinburgh to sultry Istanbul, from Canada to Mexico, Scandinavia to North Africa and Sumatra, Japan and the Himalayas. Fred Hageneder's fascinating book is the first to cover all aspects of the botany as well as the cultural history and mythology of the genus Taxus. This is the remarkable story of the oldest living things in Europe.

ROBERT HARDY is famous for appearing in All Creatures Great and Small and the Harry Potter films. Away from acting, he is an acknowledged expert on archery. He is a Trustee of the Royal Armouries at HM Tower of London and of the Mary Rose Trust and is the author of The Great Warbow (with Matthew Strickland).