Rosa gigantea
Collett ex Crép.
by
Ellen Willmott (1910-14)
Rosa
gigantea: caule elongato, sarmentoso; aculeis sparsis, robustis,
conformibus, falcatis; foliolis 5, oblongis, acutis, magnis, minute
simpliciter serratis, utrinque viridibus, glabris ; rhachi glabra ;
stipulis angustis, adnatis, apicibus liberis ovato-lanceolatis ;
floribus solitariis; pedicellis nudis, glabris; calycis tubo oblongo,
nudo; lobis simplicibus, lanceolatis, apice foliaceis, dorso glabris
; petalis magnis, albis, late cuneatis ; stylis pubescentibus,
liberis, inclusis ; fructu globoso, glabro, nudo ; sepalis patulis,
demum deciduis ; carpellis fructiferis, magnis, castaneis, nitidis,
glabris.
R. gigantea Collett ex Crépin
in Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. vol. xxvii. pt. 2, p. 148 (1888) ;
vol. xxviii. pt. 2, p. ii (1889).--Gard. Chron. ser. 3,
vol. vi. p. 12, fig. 4 (1889).-- Collett & Hemsley in Journ.
Linn. Soc. vol. xxviii. pp. 6, 55, t. 9 (1890). -- Koehne,
Deutsche Dendrol. p. 280 (1893).--Berger in Gard. Chron.
ser. 3, vol. xxiii. pp. 375, 376 (1898) -- Rehder in Bailey,
Cycl. Am. Hort. vol. iv. p. 1551 (1902). - Bot. Mag.
vol. cxxx t. 7972 (1904). -- Journ. As. Soc. Beng. vol.
lxxiii. p. 203 (1904). - C. K. Schneider, Ill. Handbuch
Laubholzk. vol. i. p. 545 (1906).--Brandis, Indian Trees,
p. 287 (1906).
Stems long, trailing; prickles uniform, scattered,
stout, hooked. Leaflets 5, large, oblong, acute, finely
simply toothed, the end one 2-1/2 - 3 in. long, the side ones
distinctly stalked, green and glabrous on both surfaces;
petioles glabrous ; stipules adnate, narrow, with
small, ovate-lanceolate free points. Flowers large,
solitary; pedicels naked, glabrous. Calyx-tube
oblong, naked; lobes simple, lanceolate, with long
foliaceous tips, 1-1/4 - 1-1/2 in. long, glabrous on the back.
Petals white, broadly cuneate, 2 in. long. Styles
free, included, pubescent. Fruit globose, glabrous, naked,
bright red; sepals spreading, deciduous. Fruit carpels
brown, shining, glabrous, 1/4 in. diameter.
Rosa gigantea was collected in 1888 in the Shan Hills,
Upper Burma, at elevations of 4,000 to 5,000 feet, by the late
General Sir Henry Collett, who sent dried specimens to Kew and to
the Calcutta Botanic Garden, whence they were sent to Crépin with
the name gigantea suggested by the discoverer. It has also
been collected by Mr. W. Hancock and Dr. A. Henry in Mengtze in the
province of Yun-nan. The flowers are said to be sometimes as much as
fifteen inches in circumference.
Rosa gigantea grows well on the Riviera, but, though it is
quite hardy in England, the sun has not sufficient power to bring it
to the flowering stage. It blossomed for the first time in England
at Albury Park, Guildford, in 1903.
Rosa macrocarpa, which was found by Sir George Watt in
Manipur in 1882, was believed by Crépin to be identical with
Rosa gigantea, but Sir George himself considers them distinct.
In an unpublished diary he gives the following description of
Rosa macrocarpa, or, as he afterwards named it, Rosa
xanthocarpa:
"An extensive climber, running over
trees and forming at first straight unbranched stems, as thick as
the arm, younger ones with a soft grey-brown bark and here and
there short sharp hooked prickles; above completely ramified until
it envelopes the trees on which it is found. It thus produces a
truly superb effect, and, when seen from a distance, causes the
trees to appear like magnolias, with large yellow flowers. The
leaves when young have a rich brownish green tint; when older they
become pale shining green; leaflets 5-7, ovate-oblong, acuminate,
shortly and sharply serrate, the terminal one on a long petiole (1
in.), the others almost sessile; stipules very long, linear,
adnate throughout their length (except their spreading terminal
arms) and thus extending along the greater portion of the
leaf-stalk ; in the more vigorous shoots they are conspicuous and
red-coloured, but in the older parts they become very narrow.
Prickles very few on the flowering branches, short, sharp,
recurved ; on the young flowerless shoots large, massive, flat,
recurved. Flowers solitary or two or three in the axils of the
terminal leaves of the shoots; flower-buds very long, smooth,
glaucous. Calyx-teeth erect in bud, long, lanceolate, acuminate,
quite entire, not becoming foliaceous but embracing firmly the
pointed bud, silky tomentose upon the upper surface and margins
(ciliate), quite glabrous below (that is, the outer surface of the
bud), sharply reflexed when the flower is fully expanded. Ovary
(the hip) glabrous; achenes very large, massive, sparsely hairy,
with long, protruding, free styles and yellow globular stigmas.
Stamens numerous, anthers orange-coloured. The fleshy hip or fruit
is eaten by the Nagas, becomes as large as a small apple, and is
smooth, glabrous, yellow (certainly never' red, as has been said
of the species grown in Europe) and sweetly scented."
"This species seems to me as
possibly allied to, though quite distinct from, Rosa chinensis
Jacq., and may probably be the true ancestral form of the
Tea-roses. It was nowhere observed near villages, but was found
frequenting the forests, far away from human dwellings.Since the
Nagas do not cultivate flowering plants and seem never to have
done so, there is no reason to doubt but that Rosa macrocarpa
is, as stated, a truly indigenous plant on the north-eastern
mountains of the Burma-Manipur frontier."
In support of his view that the two
Roses should be kept distinct Sir George adds that in all the forms
of Rosa gigantea under cultivation the leaflets are much
narrower than in Rosa macrocapa, they are 7-9 in number
instead of 5-7, with petioles often formidably armed; and moreover
the flowers of Rosa gigantea are white, whilst those of
Rosa macrocarpa are distinctly yellow. He suggests that the
Rosa gigantea of cultivation may possibly be some hybrid of
Rosa chinensis.
The flowers from which the drawing was
made came from the fine plant in Lord Brougham's garden at Cannes.
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Extract from The Genus Rosa by Ellen Willmott (1910 - 1914),
illustration : Alfred Parsons. |
www.rosarosam.com
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