118 
Egypt; Cairo, Forskal, 491! Pfund! ere es Muschler | 
without precise locality, Wiest in Herb. Drake! 
Asta. Asia Minor: Mysia; valley of the ie Rhodius, Sin- 
tents, ‘168 1 Lydia; Kassaba plain east of Smyrna, Balansa, 296! 
wear Magpies Ball! ste Ingless, Mitchell! Pisidia ; Tsbanta: 
Heldreich! Cypru era, Gaudry, 254! between Peristerona 
and Dal, Sintenis $ ‘Rin, 811! Syria: Aleppo; Haman, Sin- 
tenis, 1449! near Antioch, meet ogres betwoon El Beids 
and Palm ae Post! Barada V. ley, near Damascus, gece 
Jericho, Dinsmore! Mesopot seniac Mossu Ao ots chy, 413 mn Herb. 
and Avr n, TyencisToschtl Trak-Ajem “Teheran, Buhse! 
Fars; Bedaakia Stapf, 592! Mahluga Lake, rt 2191! Ker- 
man; near Kerman, 6300 ft., Bornmiiller, 4667! Turkestan: 
3 
Karnap-tau, Lehmann (type of C. integrifolia, Bunge)! Aska- 
bad, Litwinow, 71! Sintenis, 1162! Kata-Kurgan, Rein, 11!- 
oye A. Regel (type of C. tinctoria, var. albo-tomentosa, 
Regel MSS.)! 
B. ‘glabrata, Heldr. Folia breviter dentata, primum secus 
marginem et parce secus nervos pilosa, mox omnino glabra; cap- 
sula vix muricata.—Chrozophora bec Pax et K. Hoffm. in 
Engl. Pflanzenr. IV. 147. vi. p. 24, fig. 5 (1912). C. tinctorna 
var. glabrata, Heldr. in Parnassos p- 277, nomen (1899). 
Sours eiesaae Greece; Cyclades; Santorin (Thyra), Sar- 
tori, 1 
The t tee form of Chrozophora obliqua has been so generally 
recognised as a distinct species that it has been described under no 
fewer than five different names s by Vahl, Willdenow, Sibthorp and 
S Bunge 
already been distin 
Tournefort long before any of these names were used. a 
tinctoria it is easily Sea by its very villous lea 
n to the width than cieis “of the 
The variety from Santorin, though it is, as Pas and Hoffman 
ecndition of the true od 
q “a _ Senegalenses, Pax et K. Hoffm. in Engl. Phase: PVG: 
147. 20, pro sectione (1912). Petala ubi color indicatus 
p- 
peeled a ; stigmata aurantiaca; capsula matura albescens, 
E 
