342 WILSON EXPEDITION TO CHINA 
A distinct variety in some respects intermediate between var. tenuisepala 
Maximowicz and var. lissocarpa Rehder & Wilson having the narrow sepals and 
villose achenes of the former and the glabrous character of the latter. From both of 
these and from other forms of this variable species it is distinguished by the charac- 
ters described above. "Though the leaves are thin in a dried state we suspect that 
they are rather fleshy on living plants. In foliage it resembles somewhat C. chinensis 
Retzius, which is easily distinguished, however, by its linear-oblong anthers, 
short filaments, pointed buds, paniculate inflorescence and firmer, usually narrower 
leaflets, drying nearly black. 
Ser. ORIENTALES Prantl. 
Clematis Henryi Oliver in Hooker’s Icon. XIX. t. 1819 (1889). — 
Finet & Gagnepain in Bull. Soc. Bot. France, L. 540 (1903); Contrib. 
Fl. As. Or. 1. 25 (1905). 
Western Hupeh: Ichang, glens, alt. 30-300 m., January 1909 
(No. 2485; climber 2-4 m., flowers white); Patung Hsien, ravines, 
alt. 1000 m., April 1907 (No. 2486; climber 3 m.); without locality, 
March 31, 1900 (Veitch Exped. No. 117); vicinity of Ichang, A. Henry 
(Nos. 3280, 3280*, 3280^). Yunnan: Mengtze, forests, alt. 2000 m., 
A. Henry (No. 9864); Szemao, mountains west, alt. 1600 m., A. Henry 
(No.9864). ~~~ 
A winter blooming species nowhere common; in Hupeh it is confined to low- 
level glens, ravines and rocky places. 
Clematis glauca Willdenow, Berl. Baume. 65, t. 4, fig. 1 (1796); 
Sp. II. 1290 (1799). — De Candolle, Syst. I. 36 (1818); Prodr. I. 
3 (1824). — Watson, Dendr. Brit. I. t. 73 (1825). — Ledebour, Fl. 
Ross. I. 3 (1842). — Koch, Dendr. I. 423 (1869). — Koehne, Deutsch. 
Dendr. 155 (1893). — Schneider, IU. Handb. Laubholzk, I. 293, fig. 
191 b-b! (1904). 
Meclatis sibirica Spach, Hist. Vég. VII. 273 (1839). 
Clematis orientalis, var. obtusifolia Hooker f. & Thomson in Hooker f., Fl. Brit. 
Ind. I. 5 (1875). 
Clematis orientalis, var. glauca Maximowiez, Fl. Tangut. 3 (1889). — Dippel, 
Handb. Laubholzk. III. 170 (1893). 
Clematis orientalis Finet & Gagnepain in Bull. Soc. Bot. France, L. 540 (1903); 
Contrib. Fl. As. Or. I. 25 (non Linnaeus) (1905). 
We have seen no specimens of the type from China, but according to Maximo- 
wiez it occurs in Kansu and northern China. It can always be easily distinguished 
from P. orientalis L. by the sepals being glabrous except at the woolly margins. 
Clematis glauca, var. akebioides Rehder & Wilson, n. comb. 
gps orientalis, var. akebioides Maximowiez in Act. Hort. Petrop. XI. 6 
