576 



ROSACEA. XXII. Rosa. 



). 



St. Golhard. 



St. J ago. 



St. Mark. 



St. Patrick. 



sans defaut. 



sans pelales. 



Sarmatian. 



scarlet Brabant. 



sceptre. 



scone purple. 



semidouble hej 



semidouhle mignonne. 



semidouble monthly. 



semidouble new. 



seigneur d*jErtzelaar 



septum cerise. 



Seville. 



Sheffield. 



Shylock. 



Silenus. 



Silesian. 



shining semidouble. 



simplicite. 



singuliere agate. 

 Sirius. 



soliditas. 



Southampton. 



Spartan. 



sjnneless red. 



spiral, 



stcebon. 



standard, 

 state. 



Stephanus. 

 Stepney^ m.l.r. 

 striped monthly, 

 striped Provins. 

 striped velvet, 

 sugar loaf, 

 sutphurea. 

 sidphurea minor.. 

 Sultan, m.l.r. 

 superb. 



superb amaranth, 

 superbe brune. 

 superbe pyramide. 

 sur passe Singleton, 

 surpasse tout. 

 Swiss., 



Syrian. 



Tangiers. 



ten-leaved. 



temple d^Apollon. 



tete de mort. 



Theseus. 



1 tgris. 



tricolor. 



tomentosa alba. 



toujour s. 



tous les mois gris. 



transparent. 



transparente nouvclle. 



Trebonius. 



tree burnet-leaved. 



tree j^^ony* 



tresorier. 



triangular. 



triomphe. 



triomphe des dames. 



triomphe royale. 



Triton. 



turban. 



vent, permanent. Disk thickened, closing th6 throat. This 

 division borders equally close upon those of Canince and Rubigi^ 

 nosce. From both it is distinguished by its root shoots being 

 erect and stout. The most absolute marks of difference, how- 

 ever, between this and Sect. CanintE, exist in the prickles of the 

 present section being straight, and the serratures of the leaves 

 diverging. If, as is sometimes the case, the prickles of this 

 tribe are falcate, the serratures become more diverging. The 

 permanent sepals are another character by which this tribe may 

 be known from Sect. Canmce. The 'section Rubiginbsce cannot Jn 



two-coloured hundred-leaved, be confounded with the present section on account of their un- 

 two-coloured mignonne. 



vacuna. 

 vagrant. 



velours cramoisie. 



veloute. 



venerable. 



venetatus. 



Venetian. 



ventome noir. 



Venus. 



venusta. 



Veritas. 



Vermillion. 

 Vesta. 



UVlllS. 



Ves 



victoria. 



Vidua. 



villosa nouvelle. 

 Vilmorin. 

 violette. 



violette agreable. 

 violette aimable. 

 violette brillante. 

 violette ciirieuse. 

 violette foncee. 

 violette maculee. 

 violette nouvelle. 

 violette sans pareille 

 violette superbe. 

 violette superieure. 

 virgin^s. 



virginale. 

 virbtlia. 



virgo cramoisie. 

 ulterio. 



ultra-marine, 

 umbrella, 

 unique rouge. 

 Waterloo. 

 Watson* s blush. 

 Watson's white. 

 Wellington, 

 woolly -leaved, 

 white damask, 

 white pompone. 

 York. 

 Yorkshire blush* , 



Yorkshire Provins. 

 zabet, 



zatrc. 

 Zenobia. 



red, very double. 



Turbinate -cBXyyi^di or Franckfort Rose. 

 1629. Shrub 4 to 6 feet. 



Fl. June, July. Ch. 



83 R. vill6sa (Lin. spec. 704.) leaflets rounded, bluntish, 



downy all over ; fruit globose, rather depressed, partly bristly ; 



Native of Europe, in hedges; 



in Wales, 



sepals slightly compound. Tj . H. 



in Britain, in bushy rather 



Scotland, and the north of England. 

 hot. t. 2459. 



mountamous situations, 



R. mollis, Smith, engl. 



R. hetero- 



R. tomentosa /3, Lindl. ros. p. 77. 



This is a very variable plant. 



Var. /3, resinbsa (Lindl. ros. p. 77.) dwarf, grey; leaflets nar- 



row ; flowers very red. 

 Villous Rose. FL July. 



Tj. H. 

 Britain. 



Native of Ireland. 



Shrub 5 to 6 feet. 



84 R. sylve'stris (Lindl. syn 

 coloured, flexuous ; prickles hooked ; leaflets oblong, acute, 

 hoary on both sides : sepals diverging, deciduous before the 

 - - fjTH. Native of Oxford. 



Fl. June 



85 R. BoREYKIA^NA 



R. tomentosa sylvestris. Woods. 



Shrub 6 to 8 feet. 



(Bess. 



fruit is ripe ; fruit elliptic, bristly, 

 shire, in hedges. 



fTi/c? Rose. Fl. June, July. England. . 



: Spreng. syst. 2. p- 6520 

 prickles of branches scattered, recurved ; petioles prickly ; 

 leaflets doubly serrated, pubescent beneath, glandular on the 

 margins, but not beneath ; peduncles corymbose, covered wit 

 glandular bristles ; fruit oblong, glabrous, fj . H. ^atlve o 

 the north of Podolia. 



Boreykian Rose. Shrub 6 to 8 feet. \ i f 



86 R. TOMENTOSA (Smith, fl. brit. 539. engl. hot. 990.) leal- 

 lets ovate, acute, more or less downy : fruit elliptical, hispia 



Europe, in hedges and 



R 



ros. 2. p. 39. 1. 17. 



Fl. dan. 1458. 



\ thickets; plentiful in Britain- l^eu. 

 . villosa, Ehrh. arb. 45. Du Roi, harbk. 



2. p. 341. 



R. moUissima, Bork. holz. p. 307. 

 R. dubia, Wibel. wirth. p. 263. R. villosa /3, Huds. 219. i-e- 

 tals red, white at the base. 



Var. /3, scabriHscula (Smith, engl. bot. 1896.) leaves g'J^^J^^^^ 



nearly smooth except the ribs, which are hairy. T? • "• ^^ * 

 near Newcastle. ^ ^^^*;/io Tiofo^^ c.irkT^l 29. Red. ros. i< 



p. 131. t. 150. 



R. fce'tida, Batard, suppl. 29 



Tomentose Rose. Fl. June, July. Britain. Shrub 6 feet. 

 87 R. Shera'rdi (Davies, Welsh, bot. 49.) prickles coni^ 

 oked, compressed ; leaflets elliptical, acute, downy on 



hooked 



Sect. VII. Villosje {irom yillosus, villous; shrubs villous), surfaces ; sepals pinnate ; fruit globular, abrupt, rather ^''*?V^ 



Lindl. ros. p. 72. Surculi straight. Prickles straightish. Leaf- 

 lets ovate or oblong, with diverging serratures. Sepals conni- 



Tonbridge 



^ . H. Native near Kingston-upon-Thames, near Y°7'7; 

 Wells, and Down in Kent ; in Cambridgeshire and Angiesea 



•r 

 W 



equal, hooked prickles, and glandular leaves. Roughness of 

 fruit and permanence of sepals are common to both. 



82 R. turbina'ta (Ait. hort. kew. 2. p. 206.) tube of calyx 

 turbinate ; sepals undivided ; leaves villous beneath. Tj • H. 

 Native of Germany, probably spontaneous. Lawr. ros. 63. 

 Jacq. schoenbr. 4. t. 415. Jacq. fragm. 71. t. 107. f. 2. Red. 

 ros. 1. p. 127. t. 48. R. campanul^ta, Ehrh. beitr. 6. p. 97. 

 R. Francoforti^na, Mcench. hausv. 5. p. 24. R. Francfurtensis, 

 Rossig. ros. t. 11. Habit of iZ. Damascena. Flowers large, % 



i 



phylla, Woods, in Lin. trans. 12. p. 195. R. pulchella, Woods. 

 1. c. p. 196. R. pomifera, Herm. diss. 16. Flowers red or pink. jj 



Branches without bristles. 



« 



brit, fl. p. 101.) stem erect, ^ 



4 



\ 



lets ovate, acute, more or less downy ; iruit eiupucdi, .-.-r ' t 

 sepals pinnate; prickles slightly curved. Ij . H. Nativ^ 



% 





1 



