AN ANNOTATED LIST OF THE SPECIES OF CAMPANULA. 211 



Odontosepala.— Boiss., ''Diagn." ser. i., xi. 6G. 



Hab. : Caspian region, Persia. 



In the way of amepicana ; flowers large. 

 Olivier i^— DC, " Mon. Camp." p. 283, t. 9=calamenthifolia Lam. 

 olympica. — Boiss., "Diagn." ser. i., iv. 34. 



Hab. : Mt. Olympus — Asia Minor. 



A pretty species in the way of abietina, biennial. 

 Orbelica. — "Pane. Elem." 48. 



Hab. : Bulgaria. 



A small desirable species in the way of linifolia ; leaves chiefly 

 radical ; flowers large. 

 OPeadum.— Boiss. et Held., "Fl. Or." iii. 905. 

 (Syn. hithynica DC, " Prod." vii. 460.) 

 Hab. : Mt. Olympus — Greece. 



A small desirable species ; leaves small spathulate ; flowers large, 

 near Saxifraga, perhaps a synonym. 

 Opphanidea.— Boiss., "Fl. Or." iii. 897. 

 (Syn. calaminthifoiia. Oris. " Spic. Fl. Rumel." i. 286.) 

 Hab. : Macedonia, Turkey ; Mt. Athos, Is. Naxos. 

 Very near saxatilis, a smaller and prettier species than tomen- 

 tosa ; flowers larger ; leaves white downy, cordate, ovate on long 

 flattened petioles. 



Pallasiana.—R. and Sch., " Syst." v. 138=pilosa. 

 PaPPyi. — Gray in " Syst. Fl. N. America," ii. tab. 355. 

 Hab. : Georgetown, America. 



A small species in the way of Steveni, but much finer ; leaves 

 linear ; flowers large, terminal, 

 patula.— L., "Sp. PL" 1st ed., p. 163 (1753) (fig. " Eng. Bot." Brd ed., 

 t. 873). 



Hab. : England, Worcester, Hants, &c. ; Tyrolese Alps. 

 Biennial ; a very variable species, allied to Rapunculus. 

 pelia. — Haussk. MS. Herb. Kew. 

 Hab. : Thessaly. 



One of the lyrate-leaved section ; very close to pupestpis ; however, 

 in this the calycine lobes are prominently toothed. 

 Ijelviformis. — Lam., " Enc." i. 586=cOPymbosa. 

 pelviforviis. — Hort. (see cappatica). 



pepegrrina.— L., ^'Mant." ii. 204 (fig. "Bot. Mag." 31, 1257). 



{^yn. primulaefolia, Brot., "FL Lusit." i. p. 288 [1804] ; Brotero, 

 "Phytogr." 19-20 [1816J.) 



Hab. : Portugal, Tripoli, Palestine, Beyruth, Lebanon, &c. 



Biennial, but a handsome species, well worth growing, grouped 

 together in borders or singly in pots ; it seeds freely. Primulae- 

 folia has been considered a good species, and stated by De Can- 

 doUe to be a perennial, which is not the case. I have grown a great 

 many from seed from both the western and eastern localities, 

 and examined specimens in the Kew Herbarium, and have no 

 doubt about their being identical. It is a most uniform species, 

 and not variable like many of the species of this genus. 



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