Rosarum monographia, or, A botanical history of roses - to which is added an appendix, for the use of cultivators, in which the most remarkable garden varieties are systematically arranged, with (14786850373)
Identifier: rosarummonograph01lind (find matches)
Title: Rosarum monographia, or, A botanical history of roses : to which is added an appendix, for the use of cultivators, in which the most remarkable garden varieties are systematically arranged, with nineteen plates
Year: 1820 (1820s)
Authors: Lindley, John, 1799-1865
Subjects: Roses
Publisher: London : Printed for James Ridgeway ...
Contributing Library: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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ung a little downy. Leaves distant, deciduous;A///;M/e5 subulate, quickly falling off; petioles downy ornaked; leajiets 3 or 5, oblong, or ovato-lanceolate,naked, simply crenato-serrate, above shining, darkgreen, beneath paler. Flowers very numerous, small,white; hractece deciduous; stalks smooth ; fruit scarlet,the size and form of that of Cratcegus oxyacantha;styles 15, hairy, very little exserted; disk flat; sepalsdeciduous ; pericarps 2-3 roundish, naked, very shining. There can be no stronger evidence of the very im-perfect knowledge of Linnaeus in Asiatic Roses than hisciting this, which is very well figured in Petiver, to sodissimilar a plant as R. indica. This error has beencontinued by Willdenow, who probably, on that ac-count, considered Linnaeuss R. indica to be somethingvAih. which he was unacqaainted. It has a near affinity to R. Banksice, from which itsprickly stem, in a young state slightly downy, and dif-ferently shaped leaflets, sufficiently distinguish it. .^„l^ /)
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<a/.C\-f. ^-Z .yu<^^A»a^-ci^ /f .f .^rJ. r^ir-«5 V fi!?20. jftii/^.j^ ROSA BANKSIJ5. Vdl 76. ROSA Banksise. R. ramis et fnictibus inermibus. R. Banksiae Brown! in Ait. hew, ed. alt. 3. 258. Smith!in Rees in I. Curt. mag. t. 1954. Lindley inKers reg. t. 397. Redout, ros. R. Banksiana Abel chin. 160? R. inermis Roxb. MSS? Hab. in China, Ker. (v. v. c.) Branches unarmed, weak, climbing-, dull green.Stipules subulate, quickly deciduous, somewhat hairy ;/?e^/t)/e.y naked, rarely hairy; leaflets 1-5, flat, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, often waved, simply serrated, en-tirely free from pubescence except at the base of themiddle nerve, where they are very hairy. Flowers nod-ding, numerous, small, white and very double, with aweak but very pleasant scent; hractece minute, quicklydeciduous ; peduncles naked, very slender, a little thick-ened upwards; tube of the calyx hemispherical; sepalsovate, pointed, entire; styles distinct, little exserted.Fruit unknown. This is the most el
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