276 48. SAXIFBAGACE.E : HYDRAKGEjE. 



anceolati, 2-3 lin. longi, persistentes ; petala late ovalia, extus 



tellato-lepidota ; stamina 10, alterna breviora, filamentis late 



petaloideis, apice late bilobis, ovarium 3-4-loculare, vertice den- 



sissime stellato-lepidotum, stylis elongatis infra medium lepidotis 



persistentibus. Capsula non visa. 



Hupeh : Patung district {A. Henry !). Herb. Kew. 

 The loose inflorescence and very slender pedicels associated 

 with long narrow calyx-lobes characterize this species. The 

 filaments, too, are perhaps more broadly petaloid than in any 

 other species. 



2. Deutzia grandiflora, Bunge, Enum. PI. Chin. Bor. p. 30 ; 

 Walp. Rep. ii. p. 152 ; Maxim. Revis. Hydrang. As. Or. p. 30, 

 t. 3. figg. 1-13 ; Hance in Journ. Bot. 1875, p. 132 ; Franchet, 

 PI. David, p. 125, et in Mem. Soc. Sc. Nat. Cherbourg, xxiv. 

 p. 217 ; Baker et S. Moore in Journ. Linn. Soc. xvii. p. 382 ; 

 Maxim. Bull. Soc. Nat. Mosc. 1879, p. 21. 



Chihli : near Peking {Bunge ! Bretschneider ! Tatarinow ! 

 Carles ! Hancock ! Bushell !), Jehol {David, 1770 !) ; Shingking : 

 Kwandien, Hingjing, and Fuugwangshan {Boss !), Moukden to 

 Taloo river {Webster I) ; Cokea : Soul mountains {Carlesl); 

 Shantiw g : Chefoo {Fauvel ex Franchet) . Mus. Brit. ; Herb. 

 Kew. 



3. Deutzia parviflora, Bunge, Enum. PI. Ch. Bor. p. 31 ; Walp. 

 Rep. ii. p. 152 ; Maxim. Revis. Hydrang. As. Or. p. 33, t. 3. 

 figg. 18-32; Regel, Gartenfl. 1862, t. 370 (var. amurensis); 

 Hance, in Journ. Bot. 1875, p. 132 ; Franchet, PI. David, p. 124. 



Deutzia corymbosa, R. Br. in Royle, III. Himal. PL p. 216, t. 46; 

 Hook./. Fl. Brit. Ind. ii. p. 406. 



Chihh : near Peking {Bunge ! Bretschneider !) Chuilung- 

 shan {Hancock !), Jehol {David, 1819 !) ; Shingking : Peiling 

 ( Webster !) ; Hupeh : Ichang {A. Henry !) ; Kanstth : south of 

 the Hoangho {Piasezki ex Maximowicz, in Iitt.). Mus. Brit. ; 

 Herb. Kew. 



Kashmir to Bhotan, Mandshuria and Amur. 



The delimitation of the species of this genus is difficult, and 

 perhaps the Chinese plant is specifically different from the 

 Indian. 



4. Deutzia scabra, Thunb. Fl. Jap. p. 185 ; DC. Prodr. iv. 

 p. 17 ; Maxim. Revis. Hydrang. As. Or. p. 24; Hance in Jotirn. 



