iris florentina การใช้
- But this was later classed as " Iris florentina ".
- In 2014, a study was carried out on the essential oil of " Iris florentina ".
- "Iris florentina " is an accepted name by the RHS, it was given the Award of Garden Merit in 1994.
- The rhizomes also contain a plenty of starch, including isoflavone and essential oils which are used in perfumery, similar to " Iris florentina ".
- "Iris florentina " has a thick, or stout rhizome, Which is short, and has a strong, violet scent . to form clumps of plants.
- It was first published and described by Carl Linnaeus, in Systema Naturae Edition 10, Issue2 on page863 on 7 June 1759, as " Iris florentina ".
- It mentioned that Arisawa and Morita have isolated tetraoxygenated xanthone glycoside 2-C-?-D-glucopyranosyl-5-methoxy-1, 3, 6-trihydroxyxanthone from " Iris florentina ".
- On the triptych painting, " Adorazione dei Pastori " by painter Hugo van der Goes ( in 1475 or 1476 ), it has images of " Iris florentina " and " Iris pallida ".
- In 1910, William Rickatson Dykes in The Gardeners'Chronicle of September 17, 1910, felt that " Iris florentina " was not a wild species but had hybrid origin, or form of " Iris germanica ".
- It is thought that it originated in the Latin, this name was thought to refer to the Greek name " Erysimon " for the plant " Sisymbrium officinale " ( which is Latin is " ireo " ), and so was described in Latin in the Arabo-Latin Almagest of 1515 as " " Eurisim : et est volans; et jam vocatur gallina . et dicitur eurisim quasi redolens ut lilium ab ireo " " ( " Eurisim : and it is the flyer, and now it is called the hen, and it is called Eurisim, as if redolent like the lily from the'ireo'" ), via a confusion between " ireo " and the scented flower " Iris florentina ".