THE ORCHID REVIEW. 75 
ODONTOGLOSSUM X IMPERATRICE DE Russiz.—A supposed natural 
hybrid between O: Hallii and O. polyxanthum, which appeared in the col- 
lection of M. Dallemagne, of Rambouillet, France. The flowers are said to 
be intermediate, both in shape and colour.—L. Lind., Fourn. d. Orch., iv. 
p- 360. 
Lycaste Luciani, Van Imsch. and Cogn.—A Guatemalan species im- 
ported by M. A. Van Imschoot, of Ghent, with L. Skinneri, and extremely 
near L. lasioglossa, Rchb. f£ It is noted at page 30 of our January number. 
—Fourn. d. Orch., iv. p. 361. 
CaTASETUM FinetTIANuM, L. Lind. and Cogn. — Introduced from 
Columbia by Messrs. Linden, L’Horticulture Internationale, Brussels, but 
apparently a form of the very variable C. tabulare, Lindl.—Fourn. d. Orch. 
iv. p. 362. . 
MAXILLARIA LINDENL&, Cogn.—A beautiful species apparently allied to 
M. venusta, Lindl., which is dedicated to Madame L. Linden. The flowers 
are large, the sepals and petals acuminate, the colour white, with reddish 
stripes on the lateral lobes of the lip, and yellow in front. It also was 
introduced by Messrs. Linden.—ourn. d. Orch., iv. p. 362. 
MAXILLARIA MIRABILIS, Cogn.—A brilliantly coloured species near M. 
fucata, Rchb. f., with the same origin as the two preceding. mE Ate d. 
Orch., iv: p. 363. 
THE HISTORY OF ORCHID CULTIVATION. 
PART II. 
(Continued from page 48.) 
Our last paper brought us down to the end of the eighteenth century. One 
work, however, commenced before its close, deserves a passing mention. 
This is Andrews’ Botanisi’s Repository, which first saw the light in 1797. 
The first volume contains figures of Stenorhynchus speciosus (t. 3), Epiden- 
drum cochleatum (t. 13), Habenaria ciliaris (t. 42), and Liparis liliifolia 
(t. 65), all of which have already been mentioned. The drawing of the first 
was made in the collection of Lady Archer, of Ham Common ; the two next 
in Messrs. Lee and Kennedy’s Nursery, at Hammersmith ; and the last in 
the collection of the Marquis of Blandford. A record previously overlooked 
relates to Orchis:globosa, a European species, said to have been cultivated 
before 1792, by William Pitcairn, M.D. 
The early years of the present century were pedccheddwed by. the 
Napoleonic wars, consequently we find that only about thirty additional 
