Dictionary Definition
tulip n : any of numerous perennial bulbous herbs
having linear or broadly lanceolate leaves and usually a single
showy flower
User Contributed Dictionary
commons Tulipa
English
Etymology
From tulipa < tülbend < دلبند, also the root of turban; cognate with Mazandarani تولیپ.Quotations
- 1876 — "The Tulip
Mania", Harper's
New Monthly Magazine No. CCCXL, April 1876, Vol. LII.
- "The sturdy burghers of Holland took the tulip mania so badly that single bulbs that could not flower till another year would sell for more than $2000 apiece."
Translations
- Basque: idibihotz, kukupel
- Bosnian: lala, tulipan
- Catalan: tulipa
- Chinese: 鬱金香, 郁金香
- Croatian: lala, tulipan
- Czech: tulipán
- Dutch: tulp
- Esperanto: tulipo
- Finnish: tulppaani
- French: tulipe
- German: Tulpe
- Greek: τουλίπα (toulípa)
- Hebrew: צבעוני
- Hindi: ट्यूलिप (t'yūlip)
- Hungarian: tulipán
- Indonesian: tulip
- Italian: tulipano
- Japanese: チューリップ
- Korean: 튤립 (t'yullib)
- Maltese: tulipan
- Persian: لاله
- Polish: tulipan
- Romanian: lalea , tulipă
- Russian: тюльпан (tyul'pan)
- Serbian:
- Slovene: tulipan
- Spanish: tulipán
- Swedish: tulpan
- Turkish: lâle, lale
- Urdu: (lâleh)
Extensive Definition
Tulipa commonly called Tulip is a genus of about
100 species of bulbous flowering
plants in the family Liliaceae. The
native range of the species includes southern Europe, north
Africa, and
Asia from
Anatolia
and Iran in
the east to northeast of China. The centre of
diversity of the genus is in the Pamir and
Hindu
Kush mountains and the steppes of Kazakhstan. A
number of species and many hybrid
cultivars are grown in
gardens, used as pot plants or as fresh cut flowers.
Description
The species are perennials from bulbs, the tunicate bulbs are often produced on the ends of stolons and covered with glabrous to variously hairy papery coverings. The species include short low growing plants to tall upright plants, growing from 10 to 70 centimeters (4–27 in) tall. Plants with typically 2 to 6 leaves, with some species having up to 12 leaves. The cauline foliage is strap-shaped, waxy-coated, usually light to medium green and alternately arranged. The blades are somewhat fleshy and linear to oblong in shape. The large flowers are produced on scapes or subscapose stems normally lacking bracts. The stems have no leaves to a few leaves, with large species having some leaves and smaller species have none. Typically species have one flower per stem but a few species have up to four flowers. The colorful and attractive cup shaped flowers have three petals and three sepals, which are most often termed tepals because they are nearly identical. The six petaloid tepals are often marked near the bases with darker markings. The flowers have six basifixed, distinct stamens with filaments shorter than the tepals and the stigmas are districtly 3-lobed. The ovaries are superior with three chambers. The 3 angled fruits are leathery textured capsules, ellipsoid to subglobose in shape, containing numerous flat disc-shaped seeds in two rows per locule.Origin of the Name
Although tulips are associated with Holland, both the
flower and its name originated in the Ottoman
Empire. The tulip is actually not a Dutch flower as many people
tend to believe. The tulip, or "Lale" as it is called in Turkey, is
a flower indigenous to Iran, Afghanistan,
Turkey and
other parts of Central
Asia. A Dutch ambassador in Turkey in the 16th century, who was
also a great floral enthusiast,
Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, got their very names because of
their Persian
origins. Tulips were brought to Europe in the 16th century; the
word tulip, which earlier in English appeared in such forms as
tulipa or tulipant, entered the language by way of French tulipe
and its obsolete form tulipan or by way of Modern Latin tulīpa,
from Ottoman
Turkish tülbend, "muslin, gauze." (The English word turban, first recorded in English
in the 16th century, can also be traced to Ottoman Turkish
tülbend.) The Turkish word for gauze, with which turbans can be
wrapped, seems to have been used for the flower because a fully
opened tulip was thought to resemble a turban.
Cultivation
Tulips originate from mountainous areas with temperate climates and need a period of cool dormancy. They do best in climates with long cool springs and early summers, but they are often grown as spring blooming annual plantings in warmer areas of the world. The bulbs are typically planted in late summer and fall, normally from 10 to 20 cm (4 to 8 in.) deep, depending of the type planted, in well draining soils. In parts of the world that do not have long cool springs and early summers, the bulbs are often planted up to 12 inches deep, this provides some protection from the heat of summer and tends to force the plants to regenerate one large bulb each year instead of many smaller non blooming ones. This can extend the usefulness of the plants in warmer areas a few years but not stave off the degradation in bulb size and eventual death of the plants.Propagation
Tulips can be propagated through offsets, seeds or micropropagation. Offsets and tissue culture methods are means of asexual propagation, they are used to produce genetic clones of the parent plant which maintains cultivar integrity. Seed raised plants show greater variation, and seeds are most often used to propagate species and subspecies or are used for the creation of new hybrids. Many tulip species can cross pollinate with each other; when tulip populations overlap with other species or subspecies, they very often hybridize, producing populations of mixed plants in the wild. Most tulip cultivars are complex hybrids and sterile, those plants that produce seeds produce offspring very dissimilar to the parents.In horticulture, tulips are divided up into
fifteen groups mostly based on flower morphology and plant
size.
- Single early group - with cup-shaped single flowers, no larger than 8cm across (3 inches). They bloom early to mid season. Growing 15 to 45cm tall.
- Double early group - with fully double flowers, bowl shaped to 8cm across. Plants typically grow from 30-40cm tall.
- Triumph group - single, cup shaped flowers up to 6cm wide. Plants grow 35-60cm tall and bloom mid to late season.
- Darwin hybrid group - single flowers are ovoid in shape and up to 8cm wide. Plants grow 50-70cm tall and bloom mid to late season. This group should not be confused with older Darwin tulips - which belong in the Single Late Group below.
- Single late group - cup or goblet-shaded flowers up to 8cm wide, some plants produce multi-flowering stems. Plants grow 45-75cm tall and bloom late season.
Tulip growers using offsets to produce salable
plants need a year or more of growth before plants are large enough
to flower; tulips grown from seeds often need five to eight years
of growth before the plants are large enough to flower. Commercial
growers harvest the bulbs in late summer and they are graded into
sizes; bulbs large enough to flower are sorted and sold, while
smaller bulbs are sorted into sizes and replanted. Holland is the
main producer of commercially sold plants, producing as many as 3
billion bulbs annually.
Diseases
Botrytis tulipae is a major fungal disease affecting tulips, causing cell death leading to rotten plants. Other pathogens include Anthracnose, bacterial soft rot, blight caused by Sclerotium rolfsii, bulb nematodes, other rots including blue molds, black molds and mushy rot.Historically variegated varieties admired during
the Dutch tulipomania, gained their
delicately feathered patterns from an infection with Tulip Breaking
potyvirus. The mosaic virus carried by the green peach aphids,
Myzus persicae was common in European gardens of the seventeenth
century. While the virus produces fantastically colorful flowers,
it also caused weakened plants that died slowly. Today the virus is
almost eradicated from tulip growers' fields. Those Tulips affected
by mosaic virus are called "Broken tulips", they will occasionally
revert to a plain or solid coloring, but still remain infected with
the virus.
Some historical cultivars have had a striped,
"feathered", "flamed", or variegated flower, as in the
illustration below. While
some modern varieties also display multicoloured patterns, this
results from a natural change in the upper and lower layers of
pigment in the tulip
flower.
The Black
Tulip was the title of a historical romance by Alexandre
Dumas, père (1850), in which the
city of Haarlem has a
reward outstanding for the first grower who can produce a truly
black tulip. This fascination with growing a black tulip, a
biologically impossible task, was historically accurate to the
tulipomania in which the novel is set.
Introduction to Western Europe
It is unclear who first brought the Tulip to northwest Europe. The most widely accepted story is that of Oghier Ghislain de Busbecq, Ambassador from Ferdinand I to Suleyman the Magnificent of the Ottoman Empire in 1554. He remarked in a letter that he saw "an abundance of flowers everywhere; Narcissus, hyacinths, and those which in Turkish Lale, much to our astonishment, because it was almost midwinter, a season unfriendly to flowers" (see Busbecq, qtd. in Blunt, 7). It is worth mentioning that the words Narcissus (Narges) and Lale (Laleh) originally come from Persian. In Persian Literature (classic and modern) special attention has been given to these two flowers which looked like the beloved eyes to Narges and a glass of wine to Laleh.By 1559, an account by Conrad
Gessner described tulips flowering in Augsburg, Bavaria in the
garden of Councillor Herwart. Due to the nature of the tulip's
growing cycle, the bulbs are generally removed from the ground in
June, and they must be replanted by September to endure the winter.
Busbecq's account of the supposed first sighting of tulips by a
European is likely spurious. While possible, it is doubtful that
Busbecq could successfully have had the tulip bulbs removed,
shipped, and replanted between his first sighting of them in March
1558 and Gessner's description in 1559. After introduction of the
Tulip to Europe, it gained much popularity and was seen as a sign
of abundance and indulgence in the Ottoman
Empire. The era during which the Ottoman Empire was wealthiest
is called the Tulip era, or
Lale
Devri in Turkish.
Another oft-quoted account is that of Lopo Vaz de
Sampayo, governor of the Portuguese
possessions in India. When he
returned to Portugal in disgrace after usurping his position from
the rightful governor, Sampayo supposedly took tulip bulbs with him
from Sri
Lanka. This tale too, however, does not hold up to scrutiny
because tulips do not occur in Sri Lanka and the island itself is
far from the route Sampayo's ships should have taken.
Regardless of how the flower originally arrived
in Europe, its popularity soared quickly. Charles
de L'Ecluse (Clusius) is largely responsible for the spread of
tulip bulbs in the final years of the sixteenth century. He was the
author of the first major work on tulips, completed in 1592.
Clusius had already begun to note and remark upon the variations in
colour that made the tulip so admired and his admiration of them
quickly spread to others. While occupying a chair in the medical
faculty of the University
of Leiden, Clusius planted both a teaching garden and his own
private plot with tulip bulbs. In 1596 and 1598 Clusius suffered
thefts from his garden, with over a hundred bulbs stolen in a
single raid.
Between 1634 and 1637, the early enthusiasm for
the new flowers triggered a speculative frenzy now known
as the tulip mania
and tulip bulbs were then considered a form of currency. The
Netherlands are still associated with tulips and the term 'Dutch
tulips' is often used for the cultivated forms. Tulip
Festivals are held in the Netherlands, Spalding (England)
and in North America every May, including the three week annual
Canadian
Tulip Festival in Ottawa, Canada. Tulips are
now also popular in Australia, and
several festivals are held during September and October in the
Southern
Hemisphere's spring.
The world's largest permanent display of tulips, although open to
the public only seasonally, is in Keukenhof, in the
Netherlands.
References and external links
- Blunt, Wilfrid. Tulipomania
- Clusius, Carolus. A Treatise on Tulips
- Dash, Mike. Tulipomania
- Pavord, Anna. The Tulip
- Pollan, Michael. The Botany of Desire
- Old Tulips
- Canadian National Capital Commission: The Gift of Tulips
- Greig's tulip (tulipa greigii) in its original habitat in Kazakhstan
- Lalades (Tulips of Chios: Tulipa praecox, Tulipa aegenensis, Tulipa clusiana, and Tulipa undulatifolia)
- elegant-tulip-bulbs.com: Information about 3700 tulip names
- Tulip photos
- Tulip species
Gallery
tulip in Arabic: تيوليب
tulip in Min Nan: Ut-kim-hiong
tulip in Catalan: Tulipa
tulip in Czech: Tulipán
tulip in Welsh: Tiwlip
tulip in Danish: Tulipan
tulip in German: Tulpen
tulip in Modern Greek (1453-): Τουλίπα
tulip in Spanish: Tulipa
tulip in Esperanto: Tulipo
tulip in Persian: لاله
tulip in French: Tulipe
tulip in Korean: 튤립
tulip in Upper Sorbian: Dźiwja tulpa
tulip in Indonesian: Tulip
tulip in Italian: Tulipa
tulip in Hebrew: צבעוני
tulip in Haitian: Tilip
tulip in Lithuanian: Tulpė
tulip in Hungarian: Tulipán
tulip in Malay (macrolanguage): Bunga
tulip
tulip in Dutch: Tulp
tulip in Japanese: チューリップ
tulip in Norwegian: Tulipaner
tulip in Polish: Tulipan
tulip in Portuguese: Tulipa
tulip in Romanian: Lalea
tulip in Russian: Тюльпан
tulip in Simple English: Tulip
tulip in Slovak: Tulipán
tulip in Slovenian: Tulipan
tulip in Serbian: Лала
tulip in Finnish: Tulppaanit
tulip in Swedish: Tulpansläktet
tulip in Turkish: Lale
tulip in Ukrainian: Тюльпан
tulip in Urdu: گل لالہ
tulip in Dimli: Gagıro
tulip in Samogitian: Tolpė
tulip in Chinese: 郁金香