HelpMeFind Roses, Clematis and Peonies
Roses, Clematis and Peonies
and everything gardening related.
DescriptionPhotosLineageAwardsReferencesMember RatingsMember CommentsMember JournalsCuttingsGardensBuy From 
'R. canina blondaeana' rose References
HelpMeFind's future is in your hands - Please do not take this unique resource for granted.

Your support of HelpMeFind is urgently needed. HelpMeFind, like all websites, needs funding to survive. We have set a premium-membership yearly subscription amount as low as possible to make user-community funding viable.

We are grateful to the many members who have signed up so far, but the number of premium-membership members remains too small for us to sustain the current support and development level. If you value HelpMeFind and want to see it continue we need your support too.

Yearly membership is only $2.00 per month and adds a host of additional features, and numerous planned enhancements, to take full advantage of the power and convenience of HelpMeFind. Click here to start your premium membership..

We of course also welcome donations of any amount. Click here to make a donation. Donations of $24 or more receive a thank-you gift of a 1-year premium membership.

As far as we have come, we feel HelpMeFind is still in its infancy. With your support we have so much more to accomplish.
Magazine  (2016)  Page(s) Table S2.  
 
rosa canina blondeana, Origin of the sample: Loubert Rose Garden, Genetic group 15, Percentage of assignation: 100.0, 1861, Sp, Unknown, Origin: Europe, Ploidy: 6, measured
Magazine  (1908)  Page(s) 61.  
 
Rosa BLONDAEANA Ripart ex Déséglise, Essai Monographique, p. 133 (1861). “Tall, branched. Stem-prickles robust, dilated at the base, hooked, those of the branches weaker, curved. Petioles furrowed, with fine stipitate glands, almost... 
 
Book  (1895)  Page(s) 42.  
 
In its varieties with the leaflets glandular below (groups R. scabrata, Crepin, and R. Blondeana, Rip.) R. canina may be confounded with R. Jundzilli, Besser ( = R. trachyphylla, Rau), or with R. sepium, Thuill.
Magazine  (1870)  Page(s) 137.  
 
Rosa Blondoeana Rip. Han-sur-Lesse (Namur). Formes nouvelles élévées au rang d'espèces.- M. Crépin les cite, mais sans description, dans les bulletins de la Société Royale de Botanique. v. I p. 59.
Magazine  (1867)  Page(s) 57.  
 
R. trachyphylla [Rau]. Folioles doublement dentées, glabres, munies de glandes sur les bords et les nervures.
...Blondaeana. Pétiole glanduleux; folioles glabres; pédoncules glanduleux; urcéoles glabres.
R. Blondaeana Ripart in Déségl. Monogr.., p. 93; Crép. Bull. de la Soc. roy. de Bot., I, p. 39.
Habit les buissons du Luxembourg et des environs de Coblence (Wirtgen !) ; les variétés arvatica et Blondaeana, près de Rochefort (Crépin !).
[Description of R. trachyphylla] Arbrisseau de taille moyenne. Aiguillons des rameaux sous-stipulaires et crochus. Folioles rigides, variables de forme, ovales, aiguës ou obtuses, glabres des deux côtés, doublement dentées, à nervures et dentures glanduleuses. Fleurs solitaires ou peu nombreuses, très-grandes et d'un rose brillant, très-belles, munies de larges bractées. Urcéoles ovoïdes. Sépales hérissés-glanduleux, pinnatifides. Fruit ovoïde.
Book  (1867)  Page(s) 59.  
 
[Same text as published in the "Bulletin de la Société royale de botanique de Belgique", 1867, p. 57]
Magazine  (1865)  Page(s) 10.  
 
[From "Observations on Baker's 'Review of the British Roses'" by Alfred Déséglisé]
Il nous semble que les R. vinacea, Baker, R. arvatica, Puget, R. tomentella, Lem., R. Bakeri, Desegl., R. Blondeana, Ripart, ayant les folioles parsemees de glandes en dessous, seraient mieux places dans la section Rubiginosae, que dans les Canina, quoique formant un sous-groupe, ou M. Baker place ces cinq especes.

Translation:
We believe that .....R. Blondeana....having leaflets covered with glands below are better placed in the section Rubiginosa than in Canina, though forming a sub-group, where Mr. Baker has placed the five species.
© 2025 HelpMeFind.com