English Botany or Coloured Figures of British Plants, Vol. VII
(1789) Includes photo(s). Rosa scabriuscula Roughish-leaved Dog-rose. [includes colored plate 1896] We can find not certain mention of this Rose except in the work of Mr. Winch, to whom we are obliged for specimens, and who found it in several hedges in Durham and Northumberland, in June 1804. In the very same month Mr. Crowe and myself noticed it flowering in hedges to the north of Bury, Suffolk, and judge it to be a new species... The prickles of the stem in the Rosa are more straight and slender than in the tomentosa. The leaves are certainly very different to the touch....There is a harshness about the, even when most hairy or downy, very unlike the tomentosa, neither have they any greyish hoary hue...The flowers according to Mr. Winch are always white, tinged or blotched with red, and the fruit large "in shape rather resembling the of R. villosa than of tomentosa.
(1824) Page(s) t 2196. Rosa hibernica Irish Rose ICOSANDRIA Polygynia Gen. Char. Cal. urn-shaped, fleshy, contracted at the orifice, terminating in 5 segments. Petals 5. Seeds numerous, bristly, fixed to the inside of the calyx. Spec. Char. Fruit nearly globose, smooth, as well as the flower-stalks. Prickles of the stem slightly hooked. Leaflets elliptical, smooth, with hairy ribs.
Discovered many years ago in the county of Down, about Belfast harbour, where it grows abundantly, by our often-mentioned friend John Templeton, Esq., who consequently found himself entitled to the reward of 50£ so liberally offered by the patrons of botany at Dublin for the discovery of a new Irish plant. We adopt the name by which Mr. Templeton has communicated wild specimens to us, for the singularity of the anecdote, and that we may not rob him or his countrymen of a particle of their honours. Otherwise we profess ourselves totally adverse to geographical specific names, except of the most comprehensive kinds, like borealis, eurpoaea, americana, &c. This is easily known from every described Rose with a globose germen, by the above characters. The fruit indeed is slightly elongated upwards, so as to approach an ovate figure, but is always round and broad at the base. The stem is 6 feet high, upright, much branched and very prickly. Prickles scattered, slightly hooked or deflexed. Leaflets broad-ovate or roundish, smooth, their ribs and veins hairy at the back, as in R. collina and scabriuscula, t. 1895, 1896. Flower-stalks often solitary, often 2 or 3 together, smooth. Petals pale blush-coloured. Styles distinct at the base. It is remarkable for continuing in blossom from the early part of June till the middle of November. The scarlet fruit distinguishes this species from every variety of R. spinosissima, t.187.
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