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.

Limonium sinuatum (L.) Mill.

Frost hardy, erect, densely hairy perennial with basal rosettes of lance-shaped, deeply-lobed, wavy-margined leaves, to 15cm long, and stiff, branched, winged stems, bearing panicles of tiny, funnel-shaped, pink, white or blue flowers, enclosed in white or pale calyces, in summer and autumn. It is usually grown as an annual.  To 40cm.  [RHSE, Hortus].

Horticultural & Botanical History

‘That this singular species of statice was long since an inhabitant of our gardens, appears from Parkinson, who in his Garden of Pleasant Flowers, gives an accurate description of it, accompanied by an expressive figure; since this time it has been confined to few gardens: the nurserymen have lately considered it as a newly-introduced species, and sold it accordingly.  It is one of those few plants whose calyx is of a more beautiful colour than the corolla (and which it does not lose in drying); it therefore affords an excellent example of the calyx coloratus, as also of scariosus, it being sonorous to the touch.  Being a native of Sicily, Palestine, and Africa, it is of course liable to be killed with us in severe seasons, the common practice is therefore to treat it as a green-house plant, and indeed it appears to the greatest advantage in a pot; it is much disposed to throw up new flowering stems; hence, by having several pots of it, some plants will be in blossom throughout the summer; the dried flowers are a pretty ornament for the mantle-piece in winter.  Though a kind of biennial, it is often increased by parting its roots, but more advantageously by seed; the latter, however, are but sparingly produced with us, probably for the want, as Parkinson expresses it, “of sufficient heate of the Sunne.”’  [BM t.71/1789].  Introduced to Britain in 1629.  [JD].

History at Camden Park

Listed only in the 1857 catalogue [T.958/1857].

Notes

Published Mar 24, 2009 - 05:27 PM | Last updated Mar 25, 2010 - 02:11 PM

Shown are leaves and winged stems bearing panicles of tiny, funnel-shaped blue flowers.  Curtis's Botanical Magazine t.71, 1789.

Limonium sinuatum (L.) Mill. | BM t.71/1789 | BHL

Family Plumbaginaceae
Category
Region of origin

Mediterranean

Synonyms
  • Statice sinuata L.
Common Name

Statice

Name in the Camden Park Record

Statice Sinuata 

Confidence level high