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'Fulgorie' rose References
Book  (1936)  Page(s) 283.  
 
Fulgorie (HP) in Angers ? ; carmine-pink, edges lilac, very large, double, expanded.
Magazine  (Jun 1907)  Page(s) 239-240.  
 
Dans une longue liste de Rosiers, de la collection V. Verdier, de Paris, Victor Paquet, dans le cahier de septembre 1842 de la Revue horticole, énumère un grand nombre de variétés de Rosiers, classées dans les sections connues à cette époque. Parmi ces sections figurent les Hybrides incer taines, les Hybrides de Bengale (non remontants), les Hybrides de Noisette (non remontants), les Hybrides de l’Ile-Bourbon (non remontants). Puis des :....
Variétés ayant des rapports aux Hybrides de Bengale et aux Portlands. — Aubernon, moy. ou gr. pl. rose vif. — Augustine Mouchelet, moy. tr. pl. bien faite rose violacé carminé au centre. — Comte de Paris, grande pleine rouge violacé souvent strié. — Duchesse de Sutterland, moy. ou gr. tr. mult. carné. — Fulgorie, moy. ou gr. pl. rouge vif. — Lady Fordwich, moy. pl. rouge. — Madame Laffay, gr. pl. rouge clair. — Mélanie Cornu, moy. ou gr. tr. pl. rouge vif. —Pauline Plantier, moy. ou gr. pleine rose clair. — Prince Albert, moy. ou gr. tr. pl. couleur variable du rose au violet foncé. — Princesse Hélène, gr. tr. mult. ou pl. rouge pourpre clair. — Reine de la Gulllotière, moy. tr. pl. rouge vif à bords plus clairs. — Reine Victoria, moy. ou gr. presq. pl. rouge clair. — Sisley, mov. ou gr. pl. cerise violacé vif.
Book  (1906)  Page(s) 63.  
 
4.098. Fulgorie, Hybride Remontant, (Angers), rose lilacé
Magazine  (1854)  Page(s) Annex p. 19.  
 
EXPOSITION DES 18, 19, 20, ET 21 MAI 1854, CATALOGUE.
M. Margottin, horticulteur, 33, rue du Marché-aux-Chevaux., à Paris. ROSIERS. Hybrides remontants.
985 Fulgorie.
Magazine  (1853)  Page(s) 152, Annex2 p. 25.  
 
p. 152: Liste des Exposants, et des Plantes, Fruits, Fleurs et autres Objets exposés à l'Orangerie de Tuileries du 20 au 23 septembre 1843 par les soins et l'intervention DU CERCLE GÉNÉRAL D'HORTICULTURE....
M. GAUTHIER, Entrepreneur de jardins et cultivateur de Rosiers, quai d'Orsay, avenue de Suffren, 6, en face la barrière Passy. Membre du Cercle.
Perpétuelles hybrides ....654 Fulgorie.

Annex2, p. 25: EXPOSITION DES 9, 10, 11, 12  ET 13 JUIN 1853...
M. Ferrand , Horticulteur, 27, rue de la Glacière, à Paris. Hybrides.
1801 Fulgorie.
Magazine  (1852)  Page(s) Annex p. 25, 34, 38.  
 
Exposition de 10, 11, 12 et 13 Juin 1852....
Annex, p. 25: M. Honoré Defresne, Horticulteur-pépiniériste, Rue du Soult, 12 et 14, à Vitry (sur.Seine). Roses hybrides perpétuelles.
1626 Fulgorie.

Annex, p. 34: M. Margotin, Horticulteur, Rue du Marché-aux-Chevaux, 33, à Paris. ROSIERS CULTIVÉS EN POT. Hybride.
2026 Fulgorie.

Annex, p. 38: Exposition de 10, 11, 12 et 13 Juin 1852....
M. Fontaine ( François ) , Horticulteur à Châtillon-sur-Seine, près Fontenay-aux-Roses, Rue de la Fontaine, 12. ...ROSES COUPÉES. Hybrides.
2421 Fulgory.
Magazine  (1851)  Page(s) 435.  
 
Société d'Horticulture de Paris et Centrale de France. Vingt-Deuxième Exposition de Fleurs, Fruits et Légumes...les 11, 12, 13 et 14 Septembre 1851, à l'Orangerie du Louvre....Catalogue...
M. Fontaine (François), horticulteur, rue de la Fontaine, 12, à Chatillon (Seine).- Roses coupées....
Portlands hybrides...Fulgorie
Magazine  (1851)  Page(s) Annex p. 57.  
 
EXPOSITION GÉNÉRALE DES PRODUITS DE L'HORTICULTURE Et des Objets d'Arts et d'Industrie horticoles, LES 26, 27, 28 ET 29 SEPTEMBRE 1851....
FONTAINE (François), rue de la Fontaine, 12, à Châtillon (Seine). Fleurs coupées. Hybrides. Collection comme suit :
3783 Fulgory.
Magazine  (26 Sep 1850)  Page(s) 393.  
 
Another plan, which would add greatly to the pleasure of having such a beautiful hedge to divide one's garden, would be to plant the Fulgore rose as every fourth or fifth plant in the hedge; and, if one could get them so, the plants would do much better on their own roots. This Fulgore does not do well, I believe, anywhere worked on another plant, after the first few years. It would grow better on the Gloire de Rosamene itself than on any other rose, and might safely be budded on it as it stands in the hedge; and so might Madame Laffay, the third best rose for such a hedge. Fulgore is gone much out of fashion for the last few years, because it does not grow well on the dog-rose stock, at least, it will not live long on it if pruned close; but of all the late autumn roses it is by far the sweetest, and comes nearest the old Cabbage rose in shape, and blooms as late as Madame Laffay: but the true way to manage it is to get it from cuttings, and to cut it right down to the ground every second or third year, and then after thinning the flower buds, and with "pot victuals," you might cut dozens of full blown roses of it that the people in London could not make out from regular cabbage roses, and nearly, if not altogether, as sweet. Sometimes it will make three or four shoots as many feet in length, and then flower at the ends, while the rest of the head is languishing for want of nourishment; and when that happens away go the weak parts by the first hard winter, and of course an under bark disease follows; and the sweetest of the autumn roses is pronounced to be bad to keep, and, as there is no lack of sorts, it is thrown aside. It is true, that bad habits of this nature are a good deal under the control of the gardener—the long shoots might have been stopped when it was seen that they meant to have it all their own way; but then they would turn sulky, get hide-bound, and you must either assist them to follow the bent of their own nature, and not allow them a foster-parent, but to grow on their own roots, when by an occasional cutting down to the ground they will make the best autumn bloomers we have.
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