LI LI ACE ^ 183 



Allium paradoxum, Don. A Siberian species which 

 has become introduced and naturalised, probably through 

 garden culture, in Scotland, near Edinburgh. It is 

 recorded under the same conditions near Prague in 

 Bohemia. 



AlliiiTTi roseum, L. A native of the Mediterranean 

 area. Twice recorded as naturalised in England. 

 Doubtless of garden origin. 



Asphodelus fistulosus, L. Native in dry places in 

 the Mediterranean region, and a common weed of 

 cultivated fields and roadsides in Syria and Palestine. 

 It has several times been recorded in considerable 

 quantity in England. It may possibly owe its origin 

 to Eastern grain. 



[Fritillaria Meleagris, L. Native in meadows in North 

 and Central Europe, including Southern England. In 

 such districts as the Thames Valley, where it grows 

 under conditions similar to those on the other side 

 of the Channel, there seems no room for doubt as 

 to its indigenous state, but in the greater number of 

 its localities it is recorded as a garden escape.] 



Fritillaria pyrenaica, L. A garden escape in the 

 New Forest. Indigenous in the Pyrenees. 



Hemerocallis flava, L. Native in the marshes of 

 Central and Eastern Europe. Recorded from woods 

 near the Menai Straits, where it is probably an escape 

 from gardens, but plentifully established. 



Lilium Martagon, L. Commonly cultivated in gar- 



