Camellia sasanqua

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Revision as of 00:52, 8 January 2025 by imported>Guy Harris (History and uses: Link the phrase Edo period, not the city Edo.)
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Camellia sasanqua, with common name sasanqua camellia,[1] is a species of Camellia native to southern Japan (Kyushu, Ryukyu Islands and Shikoku).[1] It is usually found growing up to an altitude of Template:Cvt.

Growing to Template:Cvt tall, this evergreen shrub has leaves that are broad and elliptic, Template:Convert long and Template:Convert broad, with finely serrated margins. The flowers are Template:Convert in diameter, with 5 to 8 white to dark pink petals.

History and uses

At the beginning of the Edo period, cultivars of Camellia sasanqua began appearing; the first record of the cultivars of this plant was made by Ihei Ito (1695–1733).[2] The Japanese call it Sazanka (Script error: No such module "Lang"., Script error: No such module "Lang".).[3]

This plant was not known in western society until in 1820 Captain Richard Rawes of the East Indiaman Warren Hastings brought Camellia sasanqua var. stricata to his relation, Thomas Carey Palmer, of Bromley in Kent.[4] Then in 1869, Dutch traders imported some specimens into Europe. It has now also been introduced to Australia, New Zealand and the United States.[3]

It has a long history of cultivation in Japan for practical rather than decorative reasons. The leaves are used to make tea while the seeds or nuts are used to make tea seed oil,[5] which is used for lighting, lubrication, cooking and cosmetic purposes. Tea oil has a higher calorific content than any other edible oil available naturally in Japan.[3]

Camellia sasanqua is valued in gardens for its handsome glossy green foliage, and fragrant single flowers that can range in color from white to deep pink and are produced extremely early in the season. Various cultivars have been selected, of which 'Crimson King',[6] 'Hugh Evans'[7] and 'Jean May'[8] have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

See also

Citations and references

Citations

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References
  • Bretschneider, E. (1898) History of European Botanical Discoveries in China, Volumes 1-2. (Sampson Low, Marston and Company).

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  4. Bretschneider (1898), pp. 282-3.
  5. Camellia sasanqua Template:Webarchive in BoDD – Botanical Dermatology Database
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