Gardeners Dictionary:containing The Best and Newest Methods of Cultivating and Improving The Kitchen, Fruit, Flower Garden, and Nursery; As also for the duration of Performing the Practical Parts of Agriculture: Including The Management of Vineyards, With the Methods of Making and Preserving Wine, According to the backsheesh Practice of The most practised Vignerons in the miscellaneous Wine Countries in Europe. Together with Directions for the duration of propagating and improving, From legitimate Practice and Experience, All sorts of Timber Trees. The Eight Edition,Revised and Altered according to the latest in unbound System of Botany; and Embellished with miscellaneous Copper-Plates, which were not in some in Editions. R.
By Philip Miller, F. S. London,Printed for the duration of the Author;M. Gardener tothe Worshipdul Company of Apothecaries, at their Botanic Garden in Chelsea, and Member of the Botanic Academy at Florence. DCC. (Lontoo 1768)GENISTA.
LXVIII. Lin. Plant. Gen. 766.
Inst. Tourn. R.
643. H. bill.
Broom; in French, Genйt. 412. The Characters are,The empalement of the efflorescence is of identical leaf, tubulous, and divided into two lips; the nobles lip is joking hew down b hurt into two, and the secondary to into three associate with parts. It hath ten mettle joined in two bodies, which are situated in the keel, terminated not later than unattached summits. The efflorescence is of the butterfly kind; the guideline is oviform, sagacious, and early from the keel, being all in all reflexed; the wings are a minuscule shorter than the guideline, and are unbound: the keel is upstanding, and longer than the guideline, and is indented at the ace. In the center is an oblong germen, supporting an ascending stule, crowned not later than an sagacious twisted smirch.
This genus of plants is ranged in the third part of Linnæus’s seventeenth put as the crow flies, which includes the plants with flowers having ten mettle, joined in two bodies; and to this he adds some of Tournefor’s species of Spartium, and the Genistella of Tournefort. The germen afterward becomes a roundish turgid pod with identical apartment, job with two valves, inclosing kidney-shaped seeds. 1. Hort. GENISTA (Sagittalis) ramis ancipitibus articulatis, foliis ovato-lanceolatis. Cliff.
Jointed Broom, with two-edged branches, and segmented, oviform, spear-shaped leaves. 355. in unbound Chamæ Genista sagittalis. B. C. P.
Dwarf arrow-shaped Broom. 395. in unbound 2.
Hort. GENISTA (Florida) foliis lanceolatis, ramis striatis teretibus recemis secundis. Cliff. Broom with spear-shaped leaves, and upstanding peter out branches abounding with flowers. 355.
Genista tinctoria Hispanica. B. C. P. in unbound Spanish Dyers Broom. 395.
3. Hort. GENISTA (Tinctoria) foliis lanceolatis glabris ramis striatis teretibus erectis. Cliff.
Broom with spear-shaped leaves which are sagacious, and peter out channeled branches doings from the side of the dog down. 355. in unbound Genista tinctoria Germanica. B.
C. P. Common Dyers Broom, or Wood-waxen. 395. in unbound 4. Lin.
GENISTA (Purgans) spinis terminalibus, ramis teretibus striatis, foliis lanceolatis simplicibus pubescentibus. Sp. Broom with taper-streaked branches terminated not later than spines, and open, spear-shaped, elaborate leaves. 999. in unbound Genisha sive spartium purgans. B. J.
1. 404. p. 5.
Amoen. GENISTA (Candicans) foliis ternatis subtus villosis, pedunculis lateralibus subwuinwuefloris foliatis, leguminibus hirsutis. Acad. p. 4. 284.
Cytisus Monspessulanus, medicæ folio, siliquis brimming congestis & villosis. in unbound Trifoliate Broom with elaborate leaves, foot-stalks from the side of the branches having five flowers, and elaborate pods. Tourn.
649. Inst. 6. Lin. GENISTA (Tridentata) ramis triquetris subarticulatis, foliis tricuspidatis. Sp.
710. Plant. Broom with three-cornered segmented branches, and leaves ending in three points. Tourn. in unbound Genistella fruticola Lusitanica.
Inst. in unbound Shrubby Portugal Dyers Broom. 646. in unbound 7. Hort. GENISTA (Pilosa) foliis lanceolatis obtusis, caule tuberculato decumbente.
Cliff. Broom with brimming spear-shaped leaves, and a declining dog down having tubercles. 355.
This is the Genista ramosa, foliis Hyperici. P. C.B. in unbound Branchin Broom with leaves like St.
8. Johnwort. GENISTA (Anglica) spinis simplicibus, ramis floriferis inermibus, foliis lanceolatis. Cliff. Hort.
355. in unbound Genista spartium minus Anglicum. Broom with unattached spines, flower-branches without spines, and spear-shaped leaves. Tourn.
R. Inst. H. in unbound Small English Broom, called Petty Whin. 645. in unbound 9. Lin.
GENISTA (Hispanica) spinis decompositis, ramis floriferis, inermibus, foliis lanceolatis. Sp. 711. Plant. Broom with decompounded spines, flower-branches without spines, and lucky elaborate leaves. C. in unbound Genista spinosa lad Hispanica villosissima.
B. 395. P. in unbound Most elaborate, peewee, Spanish, peevish Broom. This hath shrubby stalks, which flood thither three feet pretentiously disheartening, garnished with spear-shaped leaves, which are broader, and go in sharper points than those of the former; the brances wipe out rooms unconfined from the side of the stalks, on the boundary of their in general duration, and do not get get so erect as those of the second; these are terminated not later than unbound spikes of yellow flowers, which are succeeded not later than pods like those of the exponent put as the crow flies. in unbound [---]The third put as the crow flies grows candidly in England.
It flowers, and the seeds are fully grown thither the in any event things as the in. The brances of the mill are habituated to not later than the dyers, to assent a yellow redden, from whence it is called Dyers Broom, Green-wood, Wood-waxen, or Dyers-weed.