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'La Noblesse' rose References
Article (magazine) (2007) Page(s) 13. Includes photo(s). Rose "La Noblesse" (S&N 1856)
Article (magazine) (2007) Page(s) 13. Includes photo(s). Rose "La Noblesse" (S&N 1856)
Book (Aug 2002) Page(s) 53. La Noblesse Centifolia 1856 Not rated
Book (1997) Page(s) 150, 151. Includes photo(s). Page 150: Centifolia. 1856. Description and vital statistics... fully double blooms open flat and are soft silvery-pink. Page 151: [PHOTO]
Book (1997) Page(s) 21. An excellent candidate for pegging or training on a fence to manage its long, arching canes.
Book (1995) Page(s) 118. Includes photo(s).
Book (Nov 1994) Page(s) 56. La Noblesse 1856. All stocks I have seen bearing this label are typical Rosa centifolia.
Website/Catalog (1982) Page(s) 22. La Noblesse (Centifolia) Exceptionally tidy for a centifolia and flowering rather late in the summer. Highly scented well formed blooms of soft silver pink. 1856. (S) 5 x 3’.
Book (1967) Page(s) 41. For over 300 years, from the beginning of the sixteenth century, when the earliest rose-red forms of R. centifolia were produced, to the middle of the nineteenth century, when such lovely types as La Noblesse, Fantin Latour, Blanchefleur and Paul Ricault appeared, Dutch and French breeders worked carefully and patiently to perfect this new type of rose.
Book (1967) Page(s) 48. Sacheverell Sitwell and James Russell in Old Garden Roses name Fantin Latour and La Noblesse as two of the most glorious Centifolias.
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