84 ORIGIN OF CULTIVATED PLANTS. 



genous may in several cases be tlie result of self-sowing 

 from cultivation/ or that the species was formerly com- 

 mon, and is tending to disappear. Its presence in the 

 western islands of Europe favours the latter hypothesis, 

 but its absence in the islands of the Mediterranean is 

 opposed to it.^ 



Let us see whether historical and philological data 

 add anything to the facts of geograplucai botany. 



In the first place, it is in Europe that the countless 

 varieties of cabbage have been formed,^ principally since 

 the days of the artcient Greeks, Theophrastus dis- 

 tinguished three, Pliny double that number, Tournefort 

 twenty, De Candolle more than thirty. These modifica- 

 tions did not come from the East another sign of an 

 ancient cultivation in Europe and of a European origin. 



The common names are also numerous in European 

 lanffuaires, and rare or modern in those of Asia. Without 

 repeating a number of names I have given elsewhere,^ I 

 shall mention the five or six distinct and ancient roots 

 from which the European names are derived. 



Kap or Imh in several Keltic and Slav names. The 

 French name cahus comes from it. Its origin is clear Ij^ 

 the same as that of caput, because of the head-shaped 

 form of the cabbasre. 



Caul, kohl, in several Latin (caulls, stem or cabbage), 

 German (ChSli in Old German, Kohl in modern German, 

 kaal in Danish), and Keltic languages [Jcaol and kol in 

 Breton, cat in Irish).^ 



Bi'esic, hresych, hrasslc, of the Keltic and Latin 

 (brassica) languages, whence, probably, be rza and verza of 

 the Spaniards and Portuguese, varza of the Roumanians.^ 



' Watson, who is careful on these points, doubts whether the cabbigo 

 is indigenous in England {Compendium of the Ctjbele, p. 103), Out most 

 authors of British floras admit it to be so. 



^ Br. halearica and Br. cretica are perennial, almost woody, not 

 biennial ; and botanists are agreed in separating them from Br. ohtracea. 



' Aug. Pyr. de Candolle has published a paper on the divisions and 

 iibdi visions of Br. oleracea (Tran^'actionf; of fhe Hort. Sac, vol. v., trans, 

 iated into German v.nl in French in the Bibl. Univ. Agric, vol. viii.), 

 wliich is often quoted. 



* A\ph. do Candolle, Ge gr. Bot. Raisonnde, p. 839. 



* Ad. Pictet, Les.Ori'jines Indo'Europdennes, edit. 2, vol. i. p 3S0. 



* Urandza, Prodr. Fl. Romane, p. 122. 



