38 



HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY OF TREES. 



PART I. 



1596. 



1597. 



/?osa lutea 

 /Vosa moschata 

 iA^sa cinnamomea 

 /Wsa j)rovinciklis 

 JVosa gtillica 

 A me fa ncluer vulgaris 

 Plantiigo f/'ynops 

 /*aliurus aculeatus 

 i?hus Coriaria 

 Lonicera alpigena 

 Corn us mas 



Germany 



Barbary 



France 



France 



France 



South of Fiiirope 



South of Euiope 



SoJith of Europe 



South of Europe 



Switzerland 



Austria 



i-*hiladelphus coronarius South of Europe 



South of Europe 

 South of Europe 

 South of Europe 

 Spain 



South of Europe 

 Siberia 

 Italy 



South ot Europe 

 Spain 



and 



Tenor/a iVuticosa 

 Sambucns racemosa 

 F^ibiirnum 7'inus 

 F^iburnum T. lucida 

 Fiburnum T. stricta 

 Artemisia »S'ant6nica 

 /)iospyros Lotus 

 .Salvia triloba 

 /-'hlomis fiuticosa 



lanata 

 Satnreja capitata 

 iH/orus alba 

 Celtis anstralis 

 Pinus Pinaster 

 7'hiija occidentalis 

 Yucca gloriosa 

 7^uscus hypoglossum 

 Jibsa alba 



Cer asus Chamsecerasus 

 Lonicera nigra 

 Syriuga vulgaris 



Levant 



China 



South of Europe 



South of Europe 



North America 



North America 



Italy 



Crimea 



Austria 



Gerard 

 Gerard 

 (jerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 (Miller) 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerai'd 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 



Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 



Switzerland 



Persia, or probably Hun- 

 gary, of which country it has been lately discovered 

 to iDe also a native (Bot. May,, 327S., and Gard. 

 Miff., ix. 706.) Gerard. 



Phillyrea angustifolia, and the varieties, media, virgata, 

 peiulula, olea^folia, /igustrifolia, lae'vis, ilicifolia, 

 latifolia, and oblicjua S. of Eu. Earl 



Syria 



South of Europe 

 Italy 



Spain 



Periploca grae'ca 

 Salvia officinalis 

 /Styrax officiniile 

 Daphne 6'nidiuni 



of Essex 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 

 Gerard 



It will b e observed, from the foregoing list, that the date of 

 the first introduction, or rather, that of the first mention made 

 lu bookj., of foreign woody plants in England, is 1548, when 



