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'Double Cabbage Scotch' rose References
Book (1936) Page(s) 87. Double Provins Blush. Very large and double, pale flesh, darker in centre, cupped, centre petals smaller. Calyx long, leafy point. Bud dingy white. A strong tall variety, flowering early, scent near Gallica. Probably one of Robert Brown's seedlings.
Book (1903) Page(s) 236. The Scotch Rose. 18. Provins, flowers pink.
Magazine (24 Dec 1881) Page(s) 612. Catalogue of Trees and Shrubs Cultivated in the Garden of Bitton Vicarage, December, 1830. Rosa spinosissima Provins
Book (1839) Page(s) 217. ROSACEÆ. Garden Varieties I. spinosissima. 42 Double blush Provins
Book (1833) Page(s) 119. ROSA, ROSE. New garden varieties of the Spinosissima, in the Rosarium Scoticum Double Provins.
Book (1832) Page(s) 568. The following are the names of the Garden varieties of the Scotch Rose. Double Scotch Roses. double Provin's blush.
Website/Catalog (1826) Page(s) 18. Alphabetical List of Roses. Those Marked + are Double Scotch Roses. + Provins
Magazine (1822) Page(s) 294. [From "Descriptions and Account of the Varieties of Double Scotch Roses, cultivated in the Gardens of England. By Joseph Sabine, Esq. F. R. S. &c. Secretary, p. 281-305] The Double Provins Blush belongs to the section of the Blush Scotch Roses; it is a sort very generally known, growing tall and strong, and coming early into blossom. It originated I believe in the Perth nursery. The peduncles are thick, long, and quite smooth; the germen is full, large, and campanulate; the leaves of the calyx are broadly triangular, with a long pointed leaflet at the end, and expand widely; the whole are tinged with a mahogany colour. The bud is of a very pale pink, or rather a dingy white; the flower is particularly large and double, of a delicate flesh colour, deeper than the Lady's blush, and more glowing in the centre; it is cupped, and well shaped, the centre petals being smaller than the outer; the scent is fine, more like that of a Provins Rose than a common scotch Rose. It bears but few fruits; they are large, black, and globose, with slightly expanding tops. The whole flower has a character different from all the others, and when it opens well is peculiarly handsome; but the buds occasionally fail, and do not expand; in which case the flesh colour becomes dull and of a smoky hue, the buds then continue closed, and in that state decay.
Website/Catalog (1816) Page(s) 36. Trees and Shrubs. ROSA, ROSE [blooms from May through August] spinosissima... Double Cabbage Scotch
Website/Catalog (1812) Page(s) 65. ROSES. Scotch —Double Provence.
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