Neha Patil (Editor)

Japanese iris

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Scientific name
  
Japanese iris Japanese Iris UMass Amherst Greenhouse Crops and Floriculture Program

Similar
  
Iris ensata, Iris sibirica, Louisiana iris, Iris spuria, Irises

The term "Japanese iris" encompasses three species of Irises cultivated in gardens or growing wild in Japan: hanashōbu (Iris ensata), kakitsubata (Iris laevigata) and ayame (Iris sanguinea). Of these three species, I. ensata is the one most commonly referred to as "Japanese iris" outside Japan.

Contents

Japanese iris The Japanese iris garden at Tenmangu Shrine Dazaifu Kyushu Japan

The bluish purple color of the flowers of the Japanese garden iris is an example of the copigmentation phenomenon.

Japanese iris Japanese iris looks stunning in a water garden

Japanese iris 2013


Hanashōbu

Japanese iris Japanese Iris The Sprucery

The Hanashōbu (ハナショウブ, 花菖蒲, Iris ensata var. ensata, syn. I. ensata var. hortensis I. kaempferi) grows in the wet land and is the most extensively cultivated variety in Japanese gardens. According to the place where it was cultivated, it is classified into the Edo (Tokyo), Higo (Kumamoto Prefecture), Ise (Mie Prefecture), American (U.S.A.) and other series. It is extensively grown in gardens throughout the temperate zones. Several cultivars have been selected, of which 'Rose Queen' and 'Variegata' have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Kakitsubata

Japanese iris wwwyourgardenpondscentercomimagesjapanesei

The Kakitsubata (link to article in Japanese) (カキツバタ, 杜若, Iris laevigata) grows in the semi-wet land and is less popular, but is also cultivated extensively.

Japanese iris Japanese Iris wwwcoolgardenme

It is a prefectural flower of Aichi Prefecture due to the famous tanka poem which is said to have been written in this area during the Heian period, as it appears in The Tales of Ise by Ariwara no Narihira (note that the beginning syllables are "ka-ki-tsu-ha (ba)-ta"):

Japanese iris Culture of Siberian and Japanese Iris in New England

Kakitsubata at Ōta Shrine, Kyoto, is a National Natural Treasure. It was already recorded in a tanka by Fujiwara Toshinari also in the Heian period:

Ayame

The Ayame (アヤメ, 菖蒲, 文目, Iris sanguinea) is the iris typically growing wild on the dry land in Japan.

Characteristics

Note: Sweet flag, called Shōbu (ショウブ, 菖蒲) in Japanese, is a plant belonging to the family Acoraceae, genus Acorus, known for its fragrant roots, rather than its flowers.

References

Japanese iris Wikipedia