Alton Priors forum 2 room
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Yew provides the best wood for the longbow and during the conflicts with France this was a massively prized commodity. Any yew tree that survived that period must have been held very special.

You mention the theory that yews were planted in church yards to keep them away from cattle. Why plant them at all? There must be a reason why they were planted or why they were left in place if they are older than the church. If they do 'keep away the devil' and the churches were built next to them then site was chosen because of the tree. Obviously, you can't rule out an earlier demolished or wooden church from being on the site before the present one. Only if the yew is over 1800 years old can you say that its 'sacredness' predates the church - otherwise it could have been planted by the first monks to settle there to 'keep away the devil'. But then where did they get that idea from?

Lots of questions indeed.

all yew need to know about the yew at

http://www.rfs.org.uk/thirdlevel.asp?ThirdLevel=179&SecondLevel=33

sorry about the gag!

"You mention the theory that yews were planted in church yards to keep them away from cattle. Why plant them at all?"

Who is to say that anyone did plant yews other than in landscape gardens, yew walks and so on?

Imagine a number of yews growing in an area. Forget them being planted for bows as it would take too long for a sapling to develope heart wood strong enough. Then, long after the longbow era, with the increase in livestock, enclosures etc , more land is cleared and poisonous yews are grubbed up - leaving those which are growing safely behind churchyard walls where cattle can't eat them and landowners can't clear them.

Just another way of looking at it.

why the blazes go to all the trouble of building and consecrating an Xtian 'House of God' only to plant a tree outside it to 'keep away the devil' - the logic elludes me?

had the early Xtian Fathers so little faith in their own Faith?

:-|