Etymologie, Etimología, Étymologie, Etimologia, Etymology, (griech.) etymología, (lat.) etymologia, (esper.) etimologio
UK Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland, Reino Unido de Gran Bretaña e Irlanda del Norte, Royaume-Uni de Grande-Bretagne et d'Irlande du Nord, Regno Unito di Gran Bretagna e Irlanda del Nord, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, (esper.) Britujo
Rose, Rosa, Rose, Rosa, Rose, (lat.) rosa, (esper.) rozo, rozacoj
Rosen Sorten
Rosa noisettiana - Noisette Rosen - Rosa indica noisettiana, Noisettianas, Rosiers Noisette, Noisette Rose, Noisette roses
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classicroses.co.uk
Noisette
(E?)(L?) http://www.classicroses.co.uk/search.php?searchstring=Noisette
- Belle Vichysoise - Unique to us in the UK. - (Noisette) Large clusters of small double soft blue-pink flowers on a vigorous densely growing climber or shrub. Foliage plentiful.
(E?)(L?) http://www.classicroses.co.uk/productindex.php?type=rose&prodfinderformroseFamily=noisettes_and_close_relatives
Noisettes and close relative roses
- Alister Stella Gray - (Noisette) ‘Golden Rambler’ Clusters of shapely flowers yellow with eggy centres paling to cream. Rich scent. A long flowering season.
- Bouquet d'Or - (Noisette) Coppery-yellow shapely double flowers. Slightly scented. Vigorous.
- Céline Forestier - (Noisette) Large flowers of lemon to pale primrose borne amid abundant, healthy, light green foliage. Well scented.
- Claire Jacquier - (Noisette) A very good rose with considerable prowess as a climber. Well foliated. The flowers are shapely, of a rich eggy-yellow colour and exude a pleasing perfume.
- Cloth of Gold - (Noisette) ‘Chromatella’ Soft, sulphur yellow with deeper centre. Fragrant. Copious foliage. Quite vigorous growth, needs mollycoddling in cold districts. Superb under cold glass.
- Crépuscule - (Noisette) Double, shapely flowers of a pleasing mixture of orange and apricot. Light green plentiful foliage.
- Deschamps - Unique to us in the UK. - (Noisette) A vigorous member of its family. Flowers well into summer. Cherry-red, semi-double.
- Desprez à Fleurs Jaunes - (Noisette) A beautiful, quartered, double rose. Flowers are a mixture of yellow, soft orange, buff and pink with a fruity scent.
- Devoniensis - (Climbing Tea) ‘Magnolia Rose’ Very large flowers of cream/white with an occasional pink blush. Requires sheltered, sunny position or growing under glass, where its refinement can be fully appreciated.
- Duchesse d'Auerstädt - Unique to us in the UK. - (Noisette) Deserves more attention. The scented flowers are reminiscent of "Gloire de Dijon" but with a more intense orange shaded colouring. Good foliage.
- Lamarque - (Noisette) This beautiful rose will thrive if grown in a very sheltered, warm position in the South but will need cold-house protection in the North. Fragrant, shapely, pure white blooms on long stems.
- Ley’s Perpetual - (Noisette) An interesting combination of yellow and cream. The flattish flowers are fully double and scented.
- Louise d'Arzens - Unique to us in the UK. - (Noisette) Pinkish buds open to fully double creamy-white flowers. Mid-green, glossy foliage. Rare and unusual.
- Mme. Alfred Carrière - (Noisette) Lovely clusters of white sometimes flushed soft pink,double flowers. Vigorous and good on a North wall. Very fragrant.
- Reine Olga de Wurtemberg - Unique to us in the UK. - (Noisette) Rich red flowers opening to be almost flat from pointed buds. A vigorous climber with good foliage.
- Rêve d'Or - (Noisette) Very good rose. Shapely, fully double blooms of buff to yellow, with sometimes, a hint of pink. Fragrant with strong growth and foliage.
- William Allen Richardson - (Noisette) Medium sized, fully double flowers of buff to apricot. Free flowering and vigorous. Needs a sheltered, warm position.
Erstellt: 2013-09
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Hybrid Noisette (W3)
(E?)(L?) http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/glossary.php
(E?)(L?) http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/gl.php?n=166
[From The Rose Garden (Tenth Edition), by William Paul, p. 252:] "Hybrid Noisettes" are a combination of the "Provence (Centifolia) rose" and the "Noisette rose".
[From The Rose by H. B. Ellwanger, pp.215-216:] ...the "Hybrid Noisette" family ... may be divided into two sections. The original variety, "Madame Récamier", was sent out by Lacharme in 1853. Nothing more is known of the origin ... other than that one of the parents is supposed to have been a "Noisette rose" ... The flowers are of medium size, and of circular, very beautiful form. Though devoid of fragrance, the flowers are freely produced from June throughout summer ... In 1860, Lacharme sent out "Madame Gustave Bonnet", the second division of "Hybrid Noisette" family. This variety, the originator claims, was produced from seed of "Blanche Lafitte" (Bourbon), fertilized by "Sappho" (Portland) ... they have no fragrance ...
(E1)(L1) http://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?corpus=0&content=Hybrid Noisette
Abfrage im Google-Corpus mit 15Mio. eingescannter Bücher von 1500 bis heute.
Engl. "Hybrid Noisette" taucht in der Literatur um das Jahr 1840 auf.
Erstellt: 2013-09
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Noisette Perpetual (W3)
(E?)(L?) http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/glossary.php
(E?)(L?) http://www.helpmefind.com/rose/gl.php?n=196
[From The Rose Garden, by William Paul, p. 278:] a sub-class of "Hybrid Perpetuals"
[Ibid, p. 337:] These Roses are the offspring of crosses between the "Noisette" and "Hybrid Perpetual"; they are hardy and free, blooming late in the year. The individual flowers are of medium size and produced in clusters.
HelpMeFind Tip: To generate a list of Noisette Perpetual roses, try doing a CUSTOM SEARCH for Class = Noisette Perpetual.
Erstellt: 2013-09
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rogersroses
Noisette Roses The section
Noisette Roses The section
Noisettes combine the scent and late flowering of the cultivated musk rose "R. moschata", with the large flowers of the Teas and Chinas. The original ‘Blush Noisette’ has masses of small double, pale pink flowers; later varieties were raised with larger flowers.
Noisettes originated in North America, around Charleston in South Carolina. The ancestral rose, ‘Champneys’ Pink Cluster’ was raised in around 1802 by rice farmer John Champneys, and its supposed parents were a form of R. moschata pollinated with ‘Parson’s Pink China’. ‘Champneys’ Pink Cluster’ is apparently still in existence; it is a climber, bearing large sprays of loosely double flowers.
| Aimée Vibert | Aline Rozey | Alister Stella Gray | Anne-Marie Cotte | Belle Vichysoise | Blanc Pur | Blanche Duranthon | Blush Noisette | Bougainville | Bouquet dOr | Bouquet Tout Fait | Brightside Cream | Capitaine Sisolet | Caroline Marniesse | Céline Forestier | Champneys Pink Cluster | Chromatella | Claire Jacquier | Coquette des Blanches | Crépuscule | Daniel Lacombe | Duchesse dAuerstädt | Gaston Chandon | Gribaldo Nicola | Gruss an Friedberg Sang | Hérodiade |
| Jacques Amyot | Jaune Desprez | Jean Andre | Jeanne dArc | Joyces unknown Noisette | La Biche | Lady Emily Peel | Lamarque | Louise dArzens | Manettii | Maréchal Neil | Marguerite Desrayaux | Meteor | Milkmaid | Mlle Blanche Duzrschmidt | Mlle Emilie Dupuy | Mme Alfred Carrière | Mme Alfred de Rougemont | Mme Auguste Perrin | Mme Fanny de Forest | Mme François Pittet | Mme Louis Henry | Mme Trifle | Monsieur Désir | Mount Vernon | Narrow Water | Nastarana | Olga Marix | Ornement des Bosquets | Oscar Chauvry | Pavillon de Prégny | Princesse de Nassau | Rêve dOr | SARASOTA SPICE | Solfaterre | Souvenir de Lucie | Tea Rambler | Triomphe de la Duchère | Triomphe des Noisettes | William Allen Richardson
Erstellt: 2013-09
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wikipedia.org
Noisette
(E?)(L?) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_roses#Noisette
Noisette
The first Noisette rose was raised as a hybrid seedling by a South Carolina rice planter named John Champneys. Its parents were the China Rose "Parson's Pink" and the autumn-flowering musk rose ("Rosa moschata"), resulting in a vigorous climbing rose producing huge clusters of small pink flowers from spring to fall. Champneys sent seedlings of his rose (called "Champneys' Pink Cluster") to his gardening friend, "Philippe Noisette", who in turn sent plants to his brother Louis in Paris, who then introduced "Blush Noisette" in 1817. The first Noisettes were small-blossomed, fairly winter-hardy climbers, but later infusions of Tea rose genes created a Tea-Noisette subclass with larger flowers, smaller clusters, and considerably reduced winter hardiness. Examples: "Blush Noisette", "Lamarque" (Noisette); "Mme. Alfred Carriere", "Marechal Niel" (Tea-Noisette). (See French and German articles on Noisette roses)
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Erstellt: 2013-03
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Bücher zur Kategorie:
Etymologie, Etimología, Étymologie, Etimologia, Etymology, (griech.) etymología, (lat.) etymologia, (esper.) etimologio
UK Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland, Reino Unido de Gran Bretaña e Irlanda del Norte, Royaume-Uni de Grande-Bretagne et d'Irlande du Nord, Regno Unito di Gran Bretagna e Irlanda del Nord, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, (esper.) Britujo
Rose, Rosa, Rose, Rosa, Rose, (lat.) rosa, (esper.) rozo, rozacoj
Rosen Sorten
Rosa noisettiana - Noisette Rosen - Rosa indica noisettiana, Noisettianas, Rosiers Noisette, Noisette Rose, Noisette roses
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