‘John Steadman’ 
‘K.C.’ 
‘Kasan Bad 
Zwischenahn’ 
(C. Philip, compiler. The Plant Finder, 6th ed., p. 421. 1992, without 
description) : Listed as available from Ashwood Nursery, Greenforge, West 
Midlands, England. Assumed to be ‘Stedman's’. 
= ‘Stedman's’, ‘George Stedman’ 
(Wild Bros.-Sarcoxie Nursery, Sarcoxie, Missouri. Catalog, p. 4. [1965)) : 
Bushy; leaves small. 
(L. Spath, Berlin, Germany. Catalog, p. 58. 1937-38, as P. coccinea 
‘Kasan’) : Vigorous, young branches tomentose; leaves tomentose; fruit 
large; disease resistant. J. Timm & Co., Elmshorn/Holstein, Germany. 
Catalog, p. 52. 1938-39 : Vigorous, dense-branching shrub; fruit larger 
than that on older clones. Deutsche Baumschule 9:220. 1957 : Lower 
growth habit than ‘Lalandei’; fruit orange red, abundant; winter hardy to 
—30 °F. B.K. Boom. Nederlandse Dendrologie, 4th ed., p. 265. 1959, as P. 
coccinea ‘Kasan’ (Wiepking) : Bushy; leaves ovate, pointed, serrate; fruit 
orange, about 9 by 8 mm, from August; moderate scab resistance; found 
in 1935 in Russia. G. Krissmann. Deutsche Baumschule 11:20-21. 1959 
: Leaves do not bronze in winter; resistant to fire blight; Prof. Wiepking, 
Munster, Germany, procured plants in 1922 from Murat Garden, Trieste, 
Italy; gardener at Murat Garden brought clone from Botanical Garden, 
Kasan, Russia. D. Wyman. American Nurseryman 122(1):39, 42. 1965: 
Hardiest clone, zone 5; introduced into United States from Europe by 
Arnold Arboretum, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, in 1951. B.K. Boom. 
Nederlandse Dendrologie, 5th ed., p. 257. 1965 : Fruit orange (13, HCC), 
11 by 9 mm; susceptible to scab; found in Russia about 1922. 
= ‘Orange Giant’ 
Misspelled as ‘Kansan’, ‘Kanzan’, ‘Kason’, ‘Kassan’, ‘Kazan’, ‘Kazen’ 
P. coccinea 
Orange 30D, RHS 
(Joh. Bruns, Bad Zwischenahn, Germany. Catalog, p. 45. 1961-62, as P, 
coccinea ‘Kasan Bad Zwischenahn’) : Compact; fruit orange red. 
= ‘Bad Zwischenahn’, ‘Coccinea Selecta’, Typ. Zwischenahn’ 
33 
