Lilium hansonii

Japanese turk's-cap lily
Lilium hansonii flowers
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Liliales
Family: Liliaceae
Genus: Lilium
Species: L. hansonii
Binomial name
Lilium hansonii
Leichtlin ex D.D.T. Moore
Synonyms[1]
  • Lilium hansonii Leichtlin ex Baker

Lilium hansonii, called the Japanese turk's-cap lily,[2] is an East Asian species of plants in the lily family.[1][3][4] It is native to Korea, Japan, and to Jilin Province in northeastern China, as well as being widely cultivated as an ornamental.[5]

Lilium hansonii is a vigorous earlyflowering stemrooting true lily. It has elliptic to inversely lancedshaped leaves, pale green, up to 7 inches (18 cm) long and carried in whorls of 1220 leaves. In early summer it produces racemes of up 1014 small, nodding, fragrant, flowers with recurved tepals of a brilliant orangeyellow. The tepals are fleshy and show purplishbrown spots near the base. The plant grows to 35 feet (11.5 m) tall.

Lilium hansonii is named for Peter Hanson (18211887), a Danishborn American landscape artist who was an aficionado of tulips and also grew lilies.[6][7]

References

  1. 1 2 Tropicos search for Lilium hansonii
  2. Brako, L., A.Y. Rossman & D.F. Farr. 1995. Scientific and Common Names of 7,000 Vascular Plants in the United States 1–294.
  3. Leichtlin, Maximilian 1871. Moore’s Rural New Yorker 24: 60
  4. Journal of the Linnean Society, Botany 14(76): 245–246 description in Latin
  5. Brickell, Christopher, ed. (1996), RHS Encyclopedia of Garden Plants, London: Dorling Kindersley, ISBN 978-0-7513-0436-7, p. 613
  6. Coombes, Allen J. (1992), The Hamlyn Guide to Plant Names, London: Hamlyn, ISBN 978-0-600-57545-0
  7. "Peter Hanson, the artist", New York Times, 23 February 1887, retrieved 21 July 2011
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