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'Eglanteria' rose Description 
  
  
  
  Photo courtesy of Henry
HMF Ratings: 
108 favorite votes.  Average rating: 
EXCELLENT.
 
Origin: Introduced in Australia by Camden Park  in 1850 as 'R. rubiginosa'.  
Class: Hybrid Rubiginosa, Species / Wild.   
Bloom: Light pink.  Bristly glandular pedicel.  Strong, green apple fragrance.  5 petals.  Average diameter 1.5".  Single (4-8 petals) bloom form.  Once-blooming spring or summer.  Fragrant buds.   
Habit: Arching, armed with thorns / prickles.  Fragrant foliage.  5 to 7 leaflets.  
 Height: 6' to 15' (185 to 455cm).  Width: 5' to 8' (150 to 245cm).
 
Growing: USDA zone 4b through 9b.  Drought resistant.  produces decorative hips.  shade tolerant.  Disease susceptibility: very disease resistant.   
Patents: Patent status unknown (to HelpMeFind). 
Parentage: If you know the parentage of this rose, or other details, please contact us. 
Notes: R. rubiginosa Linnaeus (1771)   Foliage smells like apples. 
 Rosa villosa is the species most usually called the Apple Rose, because its hips look like small apples. In a few European countries, R. rubiginosa is sometimes also known as the Apple Rose because the leaves and buds smell like apples.
 
 From Roses of America, p. 41: One of the most famous references to it is in Shakespeare's A Midsummer-Night's Dream, where Oberon describes Titania's bower:
 I know a bank where the wild thyme blows,
 Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows;
 Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
 With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine.
 
 The Eglantine is a European species, but its history of use as a root stock for many rose varieties means that it has naturalized (sometimes invasively so) beyond its native range, including to North and South America, Australasia, and Southern Africa.
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