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Euonymus tingens Wall.

Modern name

Euonymus tingens Wall.

An evergreen shrub up to 20 or 25 ft high, devoid of down in all its parts; of bushy habit; young shoots angled; young bark grey. Leaves narrowly oval to lanceolate, tapered towards both ends, finely toothed; 112 to 3 in. long, 58 to 114 in. wide; dark glossy green, pale beneath; stalk 14 in. or less long. Flowers 12 in. wide, ‘creamy-white marbled or veined with deep purple’ (Forrest), produced in May and June in once- or twice-branched cymes 1 to 112 in. wide. Fruit 12 to 58 in. wide, four- or five-angled, described as flesh-coloured; aril scarlet.

Native of the Himalaya, where it is found up to 10,000 ft altitude, also of Yunnan and Szechwan, China. Originally described by Wallich in 1824, it was cultivated by Jackson of Kingston, Surrey, in the middle of last century, having probably been introduced by Joseph Hooker from India between 1847 and 1851. Forrest collected it several times in W. China. A healthy bush once grew in the rock garden in Edinburgh Botanic Garden, which in June 1931 was 5 ft high and 6 ft wide. A distinctive feature of the species appears to be the purple veins on the petals, which are specially noted by both Wallich and Forrest.


Genus

Euonymus

Other species in the genus