Olea capensis L.

Shrub or bushy tree with leathery oval leaves, to 6cm long, shiny above, pale beneath, and crowded terminal panicles of white flowers in summer and autumn.  To 5m.  [RHSD].

Horticultural & Botanical History

Introduced to Britain in 1730.  [JD].  ‘Our plant belongs to the variety (alpha) coriacea of the Olea capensis of the Species Plantarum of Willdenow; a variety which has been since separated by the same author, in his Enumeratio, from (beta) undulata, as a distinct species.  Undulata has been figured and described in the Hortus Schoenbrunnensis of Jacquin.  Native of the Cape of Good Hope.  Cultivated in this country at Eltham, by Dr. Sherard before 1730.  Blossoms in the greenhouse in autumn and winter. […] The fruit is a small oblong Olive, at no stage, we believe, applicable to the purposes of oeconomy, to which the European Olive is applied.’  [BR f.613/1822].

History at Camden Park

Presented to the Sydney Botanic Gardens in 1823 by Edward Macarthur.  It may not have been planted at Camden Park although it seems likely that William would have wanted it for his new garden.

Notes

Olea capensis Buchoz ex Roem. & Schult. (1817) = Pterocelastrus tricuspidatus Walp.

Published Jan 20, 2010 - 04:39 PM | Last updated Jan 20, 2010 - 04:45 PM


Figured are glossy ovate leaves and terminal panicle of small white flowers.  Botanical Register f.613, 1822.

Olea capensis L. | BR f.613/1822 | BHL

More details about Olea capensis L.
Family Oleaceae
Category
Region of origin

South Africa

Synonyms
Common Name
Name in the Camden Park Record

Olea capensis 

Confidence level high