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'Léonie Lamesch' rose Reviews & Comments
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Initial post
2 JAN 24 by
A Rose Man
This cultivar is listed as triploid in the paper 'Pollen diameter and guard cell length as predictors of ploidy in diverse rose cultivars, species, and breeding lines'
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Initial post
10 MAY 18 by
Dorothea Jungen
The rose „Kleiner Alfred“ (Little Alfred) was named after Peter and Leonie‘s first son. It seems a little bit strange to me, that Peter Lambert named a rose after his bride, bred with a rose introduced some years later, named after his baby. I prefer the first parents as reported in Journal des Roses 1899, Aglaia X (Mignonette x Sh. Hibberd)
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#1 of 1 posted
10 MAY 18 by
Patricia Routley
It seems more logical. I have changed the pollen parent from 'Kleiner Alfred' 1904 to (Mignonette 1875 x Shirley Hibberd 1874). Thank you Dorothea.
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Initial post
12 DEC 17 by
Matthew 0rwat
What an unappealing name for such a lovely rose
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#1 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Margaret Furness
It was named for the girl the breeder later married. I'd say it wins hands down over some modern names which are downright tacky.
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#7 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
jedmar
Léonie and Eugènie were daughters of Jean-Baptiste Lamesch, who had established a rose nursery in Dommeldingen, Luxembourg. So, it is another of those rose Family stories.
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#2 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Kim Rupert
Lambert raised and named the rose in 1899. He named one Leonie Lamesch, and a second, Eugenie Lamesch. Two years later, he married Leonie.
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#3 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Margaret Furness
They went to St Petersburg for their honeymoon, and were invited by the Tsar to attend a court ball at The Hermitage, which was decorated with Lambert-bred roses. That's quite a compliment!
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#4 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Kim Rupert
What a marvelous continuation of the story, Margaret! Thank you!
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#5 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Margaret Furness
Research by a Heritage Roses in Aus member, who wrote a series on major 19th century rose breeders for our Journal. And I've just found it among the References! I should learn to look there first.
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#6 of 7 posted
12 DEC 17 by
Kim Rupert
(Sheepishly) I guess I should, too!
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Initial post
8 MAY 17 by
Patricia Routley
1916 The Rose Annual p109 Walter Easlea. Dwarf Polyantha Roses. ...and I have seen such a sort as Leonie Lamesch growing in an Essex garden 6-ft to 7-ft high.
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