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Rose - Roses in cultivation |  | Rose - Roses in cultivation: Encyclopedia II - Rose - Roses in cultivation |  | Roses are one of the most popular garden shrubs and are also among the most common flowers sold by florists. Roses are of great economic importance both as a crop for florists' use and for use in perfume.
Many thousands of rose hybrids and cultivars have been bred and selected for garden use, mostly double-flowered with many or all of the stamens mutated into additional petals. Twentieth-century rose breeders generally emphasized size and color, producing large, attractive blooms with little or no scent. Many wild and "old-fashioned" roses, by contrast, have a strong sweet scent. A few cultivars, such as the Lady Banks ...
See also:Rose, Rose - Species, Rose - Roses in cultivation, Rose - Roses and culture, Rose - Symbolism, Rose - Roses in art, Rose - Quotes, Rose - Perfume |  | | Rose, Rose - Perfume, Rose - Quotes, Rose - Roses and culture, Rose - Roses in art, Rose - Roses in cultivation, Rose - Species, Rose - Symbolism |  | |
|  |  | Rose: Encyclopedia II - Rose - Roses in cultivation
Rose - Roses in cultivation
Roses are one of the most popular garden shrubs and are also among the most common flowers sold by florists. Roses are of great economic importance both as a crop for florists' use and for use in perfume.
Many thousands of rose hybrids and cultivars have been bred and selected for garden use, mostly double-flowered with many or all of the stamens mutated into additional petals. Twentieth-century rose breeders generally emphasized size and color, producing large, attractive blooms with little or no scent. Many wild and "old-fashioned" roses, by contrast, have a strong sweet scent. A few cultivars, such as the Lady Banks rose have been selected for having no thorns.
Roses thrive in in temperate climates, though certain species and cultivars can flourish in sub-tropical and even tropical climates, especially when grafted onto appropriate root-stock.
The fruit of the rose, called hips, are sometimes eaten, mainly for their vitamin C content. They are usually pressed and filtered to make rose-hip syrup, as the fine hairs surrounding the seeds are unpleasant to eat (resembling itching powder). They can also be used to make herbal tea, jam, jelly and marmalade.
There is no single system of classification for garden roses. In general, however, roses are placed in one of three main groups:
- Wild Roses - The wild roses includes the species listed above and some of their hybrids.
- Old Garden Roses - Most old garden roses are classified into one of the following (ordered by approximate age - oldest first):
- Alba - Literally "white roses", derived from R. arvensis and the closely allied R. alba. These are some of the oldest garden roses, probably brought to Britain by the Romans. Once-flowering. Examples: 'Semi-plena', 'White Rose of York'.
- Gallica - The Gallica roses have been developed from R. gallica which is a native of central and southern Europe. They flower once in the summer. Examples: 'Cardinal de Richelieu', 'Charles de Mills', 'Rosa Mundi' (R. gallica versicolor).
- Damask - Robert de Brie is given credit for bringing them from Persia to Europe sometime between 1254 and 1276. Summer Damasks (crosses between Gallica roses and R. phoenicea) bloom once in summer. Autumn Damasks (Gallicas crossed with R. moschata) bloom later, in the autumn. Examples: 'Ispahan', 'Madame Hardy'.
- Centifolia (or Provence) - These roses, raised in the seventeenth century in the Netherlands, are named for their "one hundred" petals. Once-flowering. Examples: 'Centifolia', 'Paul Ricault'.
- Moss - Closely related to the centifolias, these have a mossy excrescence on the stems and sepals. Once-flowering. Example: 'Comtesse de Murinais', 'Old Pink Moss'.
- China - The China roses brought with them an amazing ability to bloom repeatedly throughout the summer and into late autumn. Four china roses ('Slater's Crimson China', 1792; 'Parsons' Pink China', 1793; 'Hume's Blush China', 1809; and 'Parks' Yellow Tea Scented China', 1824) were brought to Europe in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries which brought about the creation of the repeat flowering old garden roses and later the modern garden roses. Examples: 'Old Blush China', 'Mutabilis'.
- Portland - These are named after the Duchess of Portland who received (from Italy in 1800) a rose then known as R. paestana or 'Scarlet Four Seasons' Rose' (now known simply as 'The Portland Rose'). This group was developed from that rose. Repeat-flowering. Example: 'James Veitch', 'Rose de Rescht', 'The Portland Rose'.
- Bourbon - They originated on l'Île de Bourbon (now called Réunion). Probably the result of a cross between the Autumn Damask and the 'Old Blush China'. Introduced in France in 1823. Repeat-flowering. Examples: 'Louise Odier', 'Mme. Pierre Oger', 'Zéphirine Drouhin'.
- Hybrid Perpetual - The dominant class of roses in Victorian England, they were derived to a great extent from the Bourbons. Repeat-flowering. Examples: 'Ferdinand Pichard', 'Reine Des Violettes'.
- Tea - The result of crossing two of the original China Roses ('Hume's Blush China' and 'Parks' Yellow Tea Scented China') with various Bourbons and Noisette roses. Somewhat more tender than other old garden roses (most likely because of R. gigantea in the ancestry of the Parks rose), teas are repeat-flowering roses although their fragrance is not always a tea scent. Example: 'Lady Hillingdon'.
- Bermuda "Mystery" Roses - A group of several dozen "found" roses that have been grown in Bermuda for at least a century. The roses have significant value and interest for those growing roses in tropical and semi-tropical regions, since they are highly resistant to both nematode damage and the fungal diseases that plague rose culture in hot, humid areas, and capable of blooming in hot and humid weather. Most of these roses are likely Old Garden Rose cultivars that have otherwise dropped out of cultivation, or sports thereof. They are "mystery roses" because their "proper" historical names have been lost. Tradition dictates that they are named after the owner of the garden where they were rediscovered.
- Miscellaneous - There are also a few smaller classes (such as Scots, Sweet Brier) and some climbing classes of old roses (including Ayrshire, Climbing China, Laevigata, Sempervirens, Noisette, Boursault, Climbing Tea, and Climbing Bourbon). Those classes with both climbing and shrub forms are often grouped together.
- Modern Garden Roses - Classification of modern roses can be quite confusing because many modern roses have old garden roses in their ancestry and their form varies so much. The classifications tend to be by growth and flowering characteristics, such as "large-flowered shrub", "recurrent, large-flowered shrub", "cluster-flowered", "rambler recurrent", or "ground-cover non-recurrent". Many of the most popular modern cultivars can however be assigned to one of these two groups:
- Hybrid Tea - The favourite florist's rose, with typically one to at most five or six large flowers per stem, the flower with numerous tightly arranged petals with reflexed tips (see photo, right). They are favoured in small gardens in formal situations, and for buttonhole roses.
- Floribunda - Flowers often smaller, in large clusters of ten or more (often many more) on each stem. These tend to give a more prominent display from a distance, so are more often used in large bedding schemes in public parks and similar spaces.
See also: Rose gallery & Rose cultivars named after celebrities
Other related archives1254, 1276, 1792, 1793, 1800, 1809, 1823, 1824, R. arkansana, A Red, Red Rose, Alberta, Arabia, Asia, Bermuda, Bread and Roses, Britain, Bulgaria, Dog Rose, Duchess of Portland, England, Europe, France, French, Gallica, Georgia, Germany, Gertrude Stein, Greek, India, Iowa, Iran, Ispahan, Italy, Kaaba, Kazanluk, Labour Party, Lady Banks rose, Lepidoptera, May 1968, Mecca, Netherlands, New York, North Dakota, Paris, Partij van de Arbeid, Persia, Persian, Pierre-Joseph Redouté, Polish, Portland, Oregon, Qamsar, R. laevigata, Republic of Georgia, Robert Burns, Romance languages, Romans, Romeo and Juliet, Rosa, Rosa canina, Rosa dumalis, Rosa eglanteria, Rosa gallica, Rosa gigantea, Rosa glauca, Rosa laevigata, Rosa multiflora, Rosa rugosa, Rose Revolution, Rose Valley, Rose cultivars named after celebrities, Rose gallery, Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose, Rugosa Rose, Rust fungus, Réunion, United Kingdom, Victorian, Wars of the Roses, White Rose, White Rose of York, William Shakespeare, achenes, alcohols, artists, beauty, bees, birds, blue rose, citronellol, climbers, coastal, cultivars, deciduous, deer, diseases, eighteenth, erosion, evergreen, finches, florist's, florists, flower, flowers, freedom, fruit, garden, genus, geraniol, goddesses, grafted, hips, hybrids, insects, jam, jelly, larvae, leaves, list of Lepidoptera which feed on Roses, love, marmalade, national flower, nematode, nineteenth centuries, non-violent, northern hemisphere, oils, paraffin, parks, perfume, petals, platonic love, pollinating, red rose of Lancaster, roots, rose hip, sand, sand dunes, scent, seeds, sepals, seventeenth century, shrub, shrubs, social democracy, socialism, species, stamens, stems, sub-tropical, tea, temperate climates, the Virgin Mary, thorns, thrushes, tropical, vitamin C, waxwings, white rose of York
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Roses in cultivation", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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