PLANTS CULTIVATED FOR THEIR FRUITS. 209 



in Theophrastus, as now Jcerasaia among the modern 

 Greeks, I notice a linguistic proof of the antiquity of 

 P. cerasus. The Albanians, descendants of the Pelas- 

 gians, call the latter vyssine, an ancient name which 

 reappears in the German Wechsel, and the Italian visciolo} 

 As the Albanians have also the name kerasw for P. 

 avium, it is probable that their ancestors very clearly 

 distinguished the two species by different names, perhaps 

 before the arrival of the Hellenes in Greece. 



Another indication of antiquity may be seen in Virgil 

 (Geor. ii. 17) 



"Pullulat ab raflice aliis densissima silva 

 Ut cerasis nlmisque " 



which applies to P. cerasus, not to P. avium. 



Two paintings of the cherry tree were found at 

 Pompeii, but it seems that it cannot be discovered to 

 which of the two species they should be attributed.^ 

 Comes calls them Pimnus cerasus. 



Any archaeological discovery would be more con- 

 vincing. The stones of the two species present a differ- 

 ence in the furrow or groove, which has not escaped the 

 observation of Heer and Sordelli. Unfortunately, only 

 one stone of P. cerasus has been found in the pre- 

 historic settlements of Italy and Switzerland, and what 

 is more, it is not quite certain from what stratum it 

 was taken. It appears that it was a non-archseological 

 stratum.^ 



From all these data, somewhat contradictory and 

 .sufficiently vague, I am inclined to admit that Pmnus 

 cerasus was known and already becoming naturalized 

 at the beginning of Greek civilization, and a little later 

 in Italy before the epoch when Lucullus brought a 

 cherry tree from Asia Minor. Pages might be tran- 

 scribed from authors, even modem ones, who attribute, 

 after Pliny, the introduction of the cherry into Italy to 



' Ad. Pictet quotes forms of the same name in Persian, Tarkish, and 

 Russian, and derives from the same source the French word guigne, now 

 nsed for certain varieties of the cherry. 



* Schoaw, Die Erde, p. 44 ; Comes, III. delle Piante, etc., in 4to, p. 56. 



* Sordelli, Piante della torhiera di Lagozza, p. 40. 



