FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS. 85 



Bot. Arr. ed. 2, 688), who first clearly separated C.jlexuosa, this is 

 the " C. minor urrensis D. Lhwyd, quam inter segetes & in hortis 

 passim proven ire ait, turn in agro Salopiensi prope Oswaldstry 

 [Oswestry], turn Montis Gomerici [Montgomery] prope Lhan- 



vylhin."— B. Syn. 114 (1690). 



0. flexuosa With. Bot. Arr. ed. 3, iii. 578 (1796). Stokes 

 identifies this with " C. impatient altera hirsutiur," which "is very 

 common in Warwickshire, in gardens and moist places" (B. Syn. 



ii. 171. Stokes called this C. parmflora, a preoccupied name 

 which C. flexuosa was substituted in ed. 3. 



C. impatiens L. Sp. PL 655 (1753). 1634. " I found it 



in rills and ditch sides about Bath and in some other places." 



Johnson, Merc. Bot. 26. 



C. bulbifera Br. in Ait. Hort. Kew., iv. 102 (1812). 1640. 

 "At Mayfield, in Sussex, in a wood called Highreede." — Park. 



Theatr. 621. 



Draba mnralis L. Sp. PL 642 (1753). 1670. " On the sides 

 of the mountains in several places of Craven in Yorkshire."— Bay, 



Cat. 50. 



D. incana L. Sp. PL 643 (1753). 1666. " At Clapdale in 

 Yorkshire in the mid way betwixt Setle & Ingleborough hill, on tbe 

 rocks."— Merrett, 90. [f " Paronychia »w.jor, Park. pag. 556. 

 Whitlow-wort. Plentifully in the North. Mr. Stonehouse." 



How, Phyt. 88 (1650).] 



D. rupestris Br. in Ait. Hort. Kew. iv. 91 (1812). 1790. 

 Found by James Dickson in 1789 on Ben Lawers.— Dicks. Crypt. 

 Fasc. ii. 29, and Trans. Linn. Soc. ii. 288. 



D. aizoides L. Mant. 91 (1767). 1804. Found by John 

 Lucas, in 1795, "near Wormshead, 16 miles west of Swansea " ; 

 and in 1803 by Dr. W. Turton, "on walls and rocks about Pennard 

 Castle, 8 miles west of Swansea."— E. B. 1271, 1338. 



Erophila vulgaris DC. Syst. ii. 356 (1821). 1597. " Upon 

 the bricke wall in Chancerie Lane belonging to the Earle of South- 

 ampton, in the suburbes of London." — Ger. 500. 



E. prsecox DC. Syst. ii. 357 (1821). 1857. Draba verm c. 

 brachycarpa Jord.— L. Cat. ed. 5, 79c. "At Scawton ... 8 miles 

 east of Thirsk."— J. G. Baker in Phyt. ii. (n.s.) 502 (1858). 



E. inflata Hook. f. 1830. " On Ben Lawers, above the Lake.' 



—Hook. Fl. Brit. ed. 1, 299. 



Cochlearia officinalis L. Sp. PL 647 (1753). 1597. "By 

 the sea side at Hull, at Boston, and Lynn, and in many other 

 places of Lincolneshire neere unto tbe sea." Ger. 324. 



C. danica L. Sp. PL 647 (1753). 1576. "In Portland^ 

 peninsula, Cornubi* vicino portu Phmmouvve ahjsq : mantimis 

 Anglic, cantibus."— Lob. Stirp. Hist. p. 338. 



C. anglica L. Sp. PL ed. 2, 903 (1762). 1570. "In Angha 

 ad amamissimi Tamesis fiuenta, qua Londinum praterlapsus e*t. 



^aA^noracia L. Sp. PL 648 (1753). ^j£™$£ 



Morpeth in Northumberland and there it is called Bedco. — iurn. 



Names, G vi. (back). 



(To be contiuued.) 



