The first plant fossils found were woody magnolia-like plants
dating back 93 million
years. Paleobotanists
have more recently uncovered
tiny herb-like flower
fossils dating back
120 million years. Flowering
plants, called angiosperms
by scientists, were
believed to be already
diverse and found in
most locations by the
middle of the Cretaceous
period… 146 million
years ago. A myriad
of images of preserved
flowers and flower parts
[in very fine detail]
have been found in fossils
located in Sweden, Portugal,
England, and along the
Eastern and Gulf coasts
of the United States.
Below are a few brief
histories of some of
today's best loved flowers. |
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Alstroemeria
Alstroemeria
is named after the Swedish botanist Baron
Klas von Astrometry. This South American
flower's seeds were among many collected
by von Alstroemeria on a trip to Spain in
1753.
Aster
There
are over 600 species of aster, the most
popular being the Monte Casino. Ancient
people believed that the odor of its leaves,
when burnt, drove away serpents. The English
gave this flower two names, astersand
starworts. Aster is Latin for
star, and referred to its star-like
shape. Wort meant root, which signified
plants with healing properties. And Asters
were laid on the graves of French soldiers
to symbolize the wish that things had turned
out differently.
Calendula
The
calendula is a member of the marigold family,
and was traditionally valued as an herb,
rather than its bright yellow blossoms.
The Romans used Calendula mixed with vinegar
to season their meat and salad dishes. Calendula
blossoms in wine were purported to soothe
indigestion, and the petals were used in
ointments that cured skin irritations, jaundice,
sore eyes, and toothaches.
Very
early Christians called this flower Mary's
Gold, and placed it by the statues of
the Virgin Mary. Again associated with religion
and healing, Calendula is the most sacred
flower of ancient India… its flower heads
were used to make garlands, which adorned
holy statues.
The
calendula's genus name, wor calendae,
means throughout the months. Like
sunflowers, Calendula's flower heads follows
the sun.
Carnation
Carnations
have been cultivated for the last 2,000
years, and they hail from the Near East.
It is said that the name, Carnation, comes
from Greece… carnis(flesh) refers
to the original color of the flower, or
perhaps the word incarnacyon(incarnation),
which refers to the incarnation of God made
flesh.
Another
possibility… Carnationcould come
from "coronation" or "corone" (flower garlands),
as it was one of the flowers used in Greek
ceremonial crowns. This popular flower was
also called dianthusby the Greek
botanist Theopharastus.
Chrysanthemums
Chrysanthemums
had been cultivated in Chinese gardens for
more than 2,500 years before they were first
exhibited in England in 1795. The ancient
Chinese named the Chrysanthemum ("chu hua"),
to be their official Flower for October,
and also the official badge of the Old Chinese
Army. Mums were considered one of the four
Chinese noble plants… along with bamboo,
the plum, and the orchid, and therefore
the lower class Chinese were not permitted
to grow them in their gardens.
Visiting
Buddhist monks brought the chrysanthemum
to Japan in AD 400. Japanese emperors so
loved this flower that they sat upon chrysanthemum
thrones, and kikus,chrysanthemums
in Japanese, were featured on the Imperial
Crest of Japan.
Even
today, the chrysanthemum is a symbol of
the sun, and the orderly unfolding of the
mum's petals denotes perfection. One of
their traditions is to put a single chrysanthemum
petal on bottom of a wine glass to sustain
a long and healthy life.
This
popular perennial's name is derived from
the Greek chrysos (gold) and anthos (flower).
In Italy chrysanthemums are associated with
death, so don’t give an Italian girl friend
a bouquet of chrysanthemums!
Daisy
According
to an old Celtic legend, the spirits of
children who died in childbirth scattered
daisies on the earth to cheer their sorrowing
parents.
Beautiful
gold hairpins, each ending in a daisy-like
ornament were found when the Minoan palace
on the Island of Crete was excavated. They
are believed to be more than 4000 years
old. Egyptian ceramics are also decorated
with daisies.
This
flower’s English name was
day's eye,
referring to the way this flower opens and
closes with the sun. And primitive medical
men drew the obvious conclusion that it
was plainly intended to cure eye troubles.
Assyrians crushed daisies and mixed them
with oil to turn gray hair dark again.
Marguerite,
the French word for daisy, is derived from
a Greek word meaning "pearl". Francis I
called his sister Marguerite of Marguerites
and the lady used the daisy as her device,
so did Margaret of Anjou the wife of Henry
IV and Margaret Beaufort, mother of Henry
VII. There is an old English saying that
spring has not come until you can set your
foot on twelve daises.
King
Henry VIII ate dishes of daisies to relieve
himself from his stomach-ulcer pain. And
a common remedy for insanity was to drink
crushed daisies steeped in wine, in small
doses for 15 days.
Dahlia
An
herbal document written in Latin just sixty
years after the coming of Columbus was discovered
1929. It noted that the Aztecs used dahlias
as a treatment for epilepsy. The Aztec culture
in Mexico was quite advanced but its wealth
of written records did not survive the introduction
of Christianity. The Aztec Herbal
is an astonishing and remarkable resource
for botanists and those studying the history
of Medicine.
Dahlias
were late in coming to Europe. European
scientific specialists considered the dahlia
as a possible source of food since a disease
had destroyed the French potato crop in
the 1840s. But the beauty of the dahlia
far surpassed its taste.
Before
insulin was discovered diabetics were often
given a diabetic sugar made from dahlia
tubers. Chemicals derived from dahlias are
used in clinical tests for liver and kidney
functions.
Between
1800 and 1805, Lord and Lady Holland lived
in France and in Spain where Lady Holland
first saw dahlias that had been introduced
to Spain about 15 years before. She sent
some home to England and it is on the strength
of that shipment that she is given credit
for the introduction of the dahlia into
England.
Delphinium
Delphinium
is from the Greek word delphis, meaning
dolphin… the flower resembles the
bottle-like nose of a dolphin.
Delphiniums
were used by West Coast Native Americans
to make blue dye, and European settlers
made ink from ground delphinium flowers.
The most ancient use of Delphinium flowers
was a strong external concoction thought
to drive away scorpions.
Gladiolus
The
Latin word gladius, meaning "sword,"
and this flower was named for the shape
of its leaves. Gladiolus was also called
"xiphium," from the Greek word xiphos,
also meaning sword. This flower is said
to have represented the Roman gladiators.
British
Gladiolus used the stem base (corms) as
a poultice and for drawing out thorns and
splinters. A mixture of powdered corms and
goat's milk was a favorite remedy for colic.
In the 18thCentury, African Gladioli
were imported in large quantities to Europe
from South Africa.
Holly
Medieval
monks called this plant the Holy Tree.
They believed Holly would keep evil spirits
away, and protect their home from lightening.
The early Romans decorated their hallways
with garlands made from Holly for their
mid-winter feast, Saturnalia.
Later
its pointed leaves represented the crown
of thorns worn by Jesus, and the red berries
his drops of blood. Holly signified eternal
life, and also represented the biblical
burning bush in the Old Testament, when
God appeared before Moses.
Lily
Lilies
have been associated with many ancient myths,
and pictures of lilies were discovered in
a villa in Crete, dating back to the Minoan
Period, about 1580 B.C.
Lilies
are mentioned in the Old Testament, and
in the New Testament, they symbolize chastity
and virtue. In both the Christian and pagan
traditions, the lily is a fertility symbol.
In Greek marriage ceremonies the bride wears
a crown of lilies and wheat… purity and
abundance. Lilies are also a symbol of death,
and at one time lilies were placed on the
graves of children.
The
lily has no true medicinal value, although
In Elizabethan times, lilies were one of
the ingredients in medicines to treatment
fever, or for cleaning wounds, burns and
sores.
Rose
Molecular
biologists, who use DNA molecules to estimate
age, can trace roses back some
200 million
years! The legends take root….
Cloris, goddess of flowers, crowned the
rose as queen of the flowers. Aphrodite
presented a rose to her son Eros, god of
love. The rose became a symbol of love and
desire.
Eros
gave the rose to Harpocrates, the god of
silence, to induce him not to gossip about
his mother's amorous indiscretions. Thus
the rose also became the emblem of silence
and secrecy. In the middle ages a rose was
suspended from the ceiling of a council
chamber, pledging all present to secrecy,
or sub Rosa, "under the rose".
The
first cultivated roses appeared in Asian
gardens more than 5,000 years ago. In ancient
Mesopotamia, Sargon I, King of the Akkadians
(2684-2630 B.C.) brought "vines, figs and
rose trees" back from a military expedition
beyond the River Tigris
Confucius
wrote that during his life (551-479 B.C.),
the Emperor of China owned over 600 books
about the culture of Roses. The Chinese
extracted oil of roses from the plants grown
in the Emperor's garden. The oil was only
used by nobles and dignitaries of the court.
If a commoner were found in possession of
even the smallest amount, he was condemned
to death!
Roses
were introduced to Rome by the Greeks. During
feasts young men and women in Athens adorned
a crown of roses and danced naked around
the temple of Hymen to symbolize the innocence
of the Golden Age.
There are nearly
25,000 varieties of Orchids
During
Roman public games all the streets were
strewn with rose petals. Rich Romans provided
for the maintenance of huge rose gardens
for their gravesites, believing they were
pleasing the Spirits of the Dead.
Egyptian
wall paintings depicting roses have been
found in tombs dating from the fifth century
B.C. to Cleopatra’s time. Cleopatra had
a passion for everything Roman, and she
is said to have scattered rose petals before
Mark Anthony's feet. Nero was wild about
roses. During lavish Roman dinner parties
rose petals rained down from the ceilings
of his banquet halls.
Roses
were introduced to Europe during the Roman
Empire, where they were mainly used for
ornamental purposes. Early Christians saw
the rose as a symbol of paganism, orgy,
and lust. Tertullian wrote an entire volume
against the flower and about 202 A.D., and
Clement of Alexandra forbade Christians
to adorn themselves with roses. Slowly the
Church absorbed some aspects of paganism
by changing them into Christian. In Catholic
litanies, the Virgin Mary is called "Rosa
mystica"
King
Childebert I had a rose garden planted for
the Queen in Paris. Charlemagne ordered
the cultivation of Roses at many. Leo IX,
elected Pope in 1084, sent a Golden Rose
to favored monarchs… masterpieces created
by the goldsmiths.
Returning
from the Seventh Crusade, Thibaut IV, Count
of Brie and Champagne and King of Navarre
(1201-1253) brought back rose bushes from
Syria for his wife. Thereafter the French
embraced the cultivation of roses, especially
the town of Rouen.
The
rose became an important heraldic symbol.
During the "War of the Roses," the House
of York was symbolized by a white rose,
the House of Lancaster by a red rose.
Tulip Bulbs
were traded like stock!
Empress
Josephine of France started her rose collection
at Malmaison in 1804 and within 10 years,
she had collected every known species. By
1829 her garden contained 2,562 different
roses. Passion for roses spread from France
to the British Isles, then throughout Western
Europe, and finally to America and Australia.
Rose
hips, the fruit produced after the flowing
season, were used for the prevention of
scurvy, and today we make rose hips teas.
Usually we think first of oranges when we
need vitamin C… they contain 49 mgs of vitamin
C per 100 grams of pulp. On the other hand,
Rose hips from the species, Rosa rugosa,
contain 2,275 to 6,977 mgs. of vitamin C
per 100 grams of pulp!
Orchid
Orchidoriginates from Greece, where
orchis, means testicle. Some
orchids are called ladies'fingers,
ladies'tresses, or longpurples.
Greek women thought that if the father of
their unborn child ate large, new tubers,
the baby would be a boy. If the mother ate
small tubers, they would give birth to a
baby girl.
The
most famous orchid, the vanilla orchid,
was said to give strength to the Aztecs,
who drank vanilla mixed with chocolate.
During
the 19thCentury, Orchids were
widely collected. There are nearly 25,000
varieties. It’s reproductive behavior has
fascinated botanists for years… to germinate,
an orchid's seeds need to be penetrated
by fungus threads.
Poinsettia
Dr.
Joel Roberts-Poinsett, the US Ambassador
to Mexico, brought the first poinsettia
to the United States in 1928. Poinsettias
are known to grow as high as sixteen feet
In Mexico. The scarlet color of the original
Poinsettias is produced by its bracts… the
leaf-like sections that grow before the
flower appears.
Because
Mexican legends say its bracts resemble
the flower of Bethlehem, Poinsettias have
the honor of decorating churches at Christmas
time. Today, this flower is known worldwide
as "the Christmas flower," and you can find
shades of cream, pink and scarlet poinsettias
adorning homes everywhere.
The
Poinsettia is a member of the euphobia,
or spurgefamily. The name originates
from the Old French espurg. This
plant was used during the Medieval times
as a purgative to rid the body of black
bile and melancholy.
Queen Anne's Lace
Queen
Anne's Lace was named for Queen Anne, wife
of King James I of England. The Queen's
friends challenged her to create lace as
beautiful as the flower.
The
root of Queen Anne's Lace, also called "wild
carrot," stimulates pigment production in
human beings. North African natives chewed
it to protect themselves from the sun.
Tiny herb-like
flower fossils
date back 120 million years
Snapdragons
We
know that Snapdragons were common in the
earliest gardens, but their actual origin
is not known. Some botanists believe they
grew wild in Spain and Italy. In the British
countryside, children would gently squeeze
the sides of the flower to open and close
the "dragon's" mouth.
Sunflower
These
flowers always turn towards the sun. They
originated in Central and South America,
and were grown for their usefulness, not
their beauty. In 1532 Francisco Pizarro
reported seeing the natives of the Inca
Empire in Peru worshipping a giant sunflower.
Incan priestesses wore large sunflower disks
made of gold on their garments.
Sunflowers
represented different meanings in many cultures.
In China they symbolized longevity. In the
Andes Mountains, golden images of sunflowers
were found in temples. And North America
Indians in the prairies placed bowls of
sunflower seeds on the graves of their dead.
King Henry VIII
ate daisies to
relieve his stomach ulcer pai
Tulip
Over
a thousand years ago, Tulips grew wild in
Persia, and near Kabul the Great Mogul Baber
counted thirty-three different species.
The word tulip is thought to be a corruption
of the Turkish word for turbans. Persian
poets sang its praises, and their artists
drew and painted it so often, that all of
Europe considered the tulip to be the symbol
of the Ottoman Empire.
There
are people in the world who eat some varieties
tulip bulbs, and Japan makes a flour from
them. The Dutch have eaten tulip bulbs when
no other food was available.
Wealthy
people began to purchase tulip bulbs that
were brought back from Turkey by Venetian
merchants. In 1610, fashionable French ladies
wore corsages of tulips, and many fabrics
were decorated with tulip designs. In the
seventeenth century, a small bed of tulips
was valued at 15,000-20,000 francs. The
bulbs became a currency, and their value
was quoted like stocks and shares.
Tulipmania
flourished between 1634-1637… just like
the California Gold Rush, people abandoned
jobs, businesses, wives, homes and lovers
to become tulip growers. The frenzy spread
from France, through Europe to the Low Countries.
It
is recorded that a Dutchman paid thirty-six
bushels of wheat, seventy-two of rice, four
oxen, twelve sheep, eight pigs, two barrels
of wine and four of beer, two tons of butter,
a thousands pounds of cheese, a bed, clothes,
and a silver cup… for one
Vice-Roibulb!
Hopefully he didn’t eat it.
The
crazed population was obsessed beyond reason.
Records show one buyer paying twelve acres
of land, another buyer paying with his new
carriage and twelve horses. The best story…
after paying for a bulb with its weight
in gold, the new owner heard that a cobbler
possessed the same variety. He bought the
cobbler’s bulb and crushed it, to increase
the value of his first bulb.
The
Dutch shipped hundreds of thousands of tulip
bulbs to Ottawa, Canada, after World War
II to show their gratitude to Canadian soldiers
for freeing Holland from the German occupation,
and for welcoming Queen Maria to reside
in Ottawa while the war raged on.
Aztecs used
Dahlias as a treatment for epilepsy
The
wealthy speculated on tulip shares. [The
word
bourseis
derived from the mania… speculators held
their meetings at the house of the noble
family, Van Bourse.] Most of the bulbs were
grown in Flanders by monks. Bulbs were traded
like stock using paper representation of
ownership. About ten million bulbs were
represented in the market. In 1637, speculation
became illegal, many people, especially
in Holland, were ruined as prices fell.
An
eighteenth century manuscript notes that
the Sheik Mohammed Lalizare, official tulip
grower of Ahmed(1703-1730) counted 1,323
varieties. Tulips are still popular and
there are many exotic varieties that we
enjoy in our gardens.
Violet
When
Napoleon married Josephine,
she wore violets, and
on each anniversary
Josephine received a
bouquet of violets.
Following Napoleon’s
lead, the French Bonapartists
chose the violet as
their emblem, and nicknamed
Napoleon "Corporal Violet".
In 1814, Napoleon asked
to visit Josephine's
tomb before being exiled
to the Island of St.
Helena. When he died,
he wore a locket around
his neck that contained
violets he had picked
from Josephine’s gravesite.
Common
sayings include: Dream
of violets and advance
in life. Wear a garland
of violets to prevent
dizziness. Violets are
considered a good luck
gift, but when violets
bloom in autumn, epidemics
will follow within the
year.
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