Notice

Colin Mills, compiler of the Hortus Camdenensis, died in late November 2012 after a short illness. As he always considered the Hortus his legacy, it is his family's intention to keep the site running in perpetuity. It will not, however, be updated in the near future.

Verbascum phoeniceum L.

Fully hardy, rosette-forming biennial with heavily veined, dark green basal leaves, to 15cm long, with slender racemes, to 30cm long, of saucer-shaped pink or violet-purple, sometimes white, flowers, to 3cm across, in spring and summer.  To 1.2m.  [RHSE, Hortus]. 

Horticultural & Botanical History

Introduced to Britain in 1796.  [PD].  ‘The Mulleins are all shewy plants; this species, a native of the southern parts of Europe, having bright purple flowers is very ornamental, and has been long thought worthy of cultivation, being seen in our gardens before the time of Gerard.  Is a perfetly hardy perennial, ” the roote (as Parkinson observes) abiding sundry yeares,” though some have supposed it to be only biennial, an error still handed down in Martyn’s Miller’s Dictionary.  May be easily propagated by parting its roots or by seeds, which however with us it rarely produces, though in some years abundantly.  Succeeds best in a sandy loam with an eastern exposure; its stems, if not tied up, are liable to suffer from high winds.  Blooms through the months of May and June.’  [BM t.885/1806].

History at Camden Park

Listed only in a handwritten note in an 1850 catalogue in the Mitchell library collection.  [ML A635.9m].  Almost certainly grown in the gardens at this time.

Notes

Published Sep 24, 2009 - 05:11 PM | Last updated Feb 18, 2010 - 05:25 PM

Figured is an oblong basal leaf and spike of purple, saucer-shaped flowers.  Curtis's Botanical Magazine t.885, 1806.

Verbascum phoeniceum L. | BM t.885/1806 | BHL

Family Scrophulariaceae
Category
Region of origin

Southern Europe, northern Africa, central Asia

Synonyms
Common Name

Purple mullein

Name in the Camden Park Record

Verbascum phoeniceum  

Confidence level high