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Neues allgemeines Garten-Magazin
(1827)  Page(s) 211.  
 
[Article by Joseph Sabine on Chinese and Indian chrysanthemums]

... John Damper Parks, who was sent to China in 1823 on board the Lowther Castle (Captain Thomas Baker) at the expense of the [Horticultural] Society..... A part of his collection arrived already in Spring 1824 on board of General Kyd (Captain Nairne), the rest he brought in May himself.
(1827)  Page(s) 266.  
 
Nachricht über die neuen und seltenen Pflanzen, welche im Garten der Gartenbaugesellschaft zu Chiswick vom März 1824 bis 1825 geblühet haben....

35) Rosa indica var. ochroleuca. Eine neue Rose kam im Jahr 1824 der Gesellschaft aus China durch Herrn Parks zu; bei der Blüthe zeigte es sich, dass es weder R. pseudo-indica, noch R. xanthina, sondern bloss eine Varietät der R. indica mit blass-schwefelgelben, stark gefüllten Blumen war. Sie gehört zu den schönsten bis jetzt bekannt gewordenen Chinesischen Rosen, und ist ein wahrer Gewinn für unsere Gärten. Sie scheint im Freien auszudauern, allein in einem Conservatorium entwickelt sie ihre Blüthen besser.

Translation:
News on the new and rare roses which have bloomed in the garden of the Horticultural Society in Chiswick from March 1824 to 1825. By John Lindley.
35) Rosa indica var. ochroleuca. A new rose came in the year 1824 to the Society from Mr. Parks; when it bloomed it became evident that it was neither R. pseudo-indica, nor R. xanthina, but only a variety of R. indica with pale sulphur-coloured, very double blooms. It belongs to the most beautiful of the Chinese roses known up to now, and is a true gain for our gardens. It seems to endure outside, however she expands her blooms better in a conservatory.
(1826)  
 
Lindley's report on some new and rare plants, which bloomed in the garden of the Horticultural Society in Chiswick.
16) Rosa Biebersteinii Lindl.. Rosa ferox M. Bieb. She is different than R. myriacantha Decandolle and is stands as such between R. rubiginosa and R. spinosissima.
(1827)  Page(s) 266.  
 
News on the new and rare roses which have bloomed in the garden of the Horticultural Society in Chiswick from March 1824 to 1825. By John Lindley.

36 Rosa gemella, Willdenow. It does not belong as Seringe states in De Candolle's Prodromus, as a variety to Rosa cinnamomea, but is rather, if one wants to see it once as only a variety, to R. carolina.
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