Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Rosa foetida

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Rosa foetida

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Genus
  
Rosa

Higher classification
  
Rose

Rosa foetida Just our Pictures Roses Rosa foetida rose picture

Similar
  
Rose, Rosa gigantea, Rosa gallica, Rosa pimpinellifolia, Rosa glauca

Rosa foetida bicolor rose


Rosa foetida, known by several common names, including Austrian briar, Persian yellow rose, and Austrian copper rose, is a species of rose, native to the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains in Georgia. It has yellow flowers with a scent which some find objectionable. Since there were no yellow roses native to Europe, its introduction from Persia was an important addition to the cultivation of roses, and R. foetida is now an important contributor to the stock of cultivated roses.

Contents

Rosa foetida Rosa Foetida Persian Yellow Buyaroseeu

Name

Rosa foetida Rosa Foetida Persian Yellow Buyaroseeu

The rose is named for its smell--foetida is Latin for "having a bad smell"—which is reminiscent of boiled linseed oil, a smell which some find objectionable. However, according to others "the smell is not all that bad."

Cultivation history

Rosa foetida Dr Giuseppe MAZZA Journalist Scientific photographer gt Rosa

Rosa foetida was imported to Europe from Persia (R. foetida 'persiana' being the name of one of its varieties), and was important to European horticulture since it had no native yellow roses. It was described (in 1583) and successfully cultivated by Carolus Clusius; he grew them in the imperial garden of Rudolf II in Vienna. Its popularity was aided by Clusius's contemporary, Flemish painter and engraver Joris Hoefnagel, who contrasted it with the Eglantine rose in a manuscript illustration.

Rosa foetida httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

An important rose, inasmuch as it is the source of yellow in modern-day hybrids, most famously 'Soleil d'Or' (R. foetida x 'Antoine Ducher'; 1900), was bred by Joseph Pernet-Ducher. One variety, Rosa foetida var. 'bicolor' , the Austrian Copper rose, blooms early in the season and has flowers with petals that are red or orange on the upper interior surface but yellow on the lower exterior surface. Rosa foetida has exerted great influence on the modern stock of cultivated roses, contributing also its susceptibility to black spot.

Description and cultivation

Rosa foetida Rosa foetida landscape architect39s pages

The rose is described as a "spindly bush, not terribly vigorous," requiring a stake or a wall, growing up to six feet tall.

Rosa foetida Turkisk gulros Wikipedia

References

Rosa foetida Wikipedia


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