BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

My Greeting

My Video

My Slide

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Type Of Rose

Heirloom Roses
Heirloom Roses™

New Rose Varieties
New for 2010

English Legend Roses®
English Legend Roses®

Very Fragrant Hybrid Tea Roses
Very Fragrant Hybrid Tea Roses

English Roses
English Roses

Climbing Roses
Climbing Roses

Shrub Rose Bushes
Shrub Roses

Outstanding Hybrid Tea Roses
Outstanding Hybrid Tea Roses

Old Garden Roses
Old Garden Roses

Floribunda Roses
Floribunda Roses

Grandiflora Roses
Grandiflora Roses

Miniature Roses
Miniature Roses

Romanticas
Romantica Roses

Hardy Roses
Hardy Roses

Groundcover Rose Bushes
Groundcover Roses

Landscape Rose Bushes
Landscape Roses

Rugosa Rose Bushes
Rugosa Roses

Ramblers
Ramblers

Hybrid Musk Roses
Hybrid Musk Roses

Unusual Color Roses
Unusual Color Roses

Saturday, February 13, 2010

History Of Rose


The rose has always been valued for its beauty and has a long history of symbolism. The ancient Greeks and Romans identified the rose with their goddesses of love referred to as Aphrodite and Venus. In Rome a wild rose would be placed on the door of a room where secret or confidential matters were discussed. The phrase sub rosa, or "under the rose", means to keep a secret — derived from this ancient Roman practice.

Early Christians identified the five petals of the rose with the five wounds of Christ. Despite this interpretation, their leaders were hesitant to adopt it because of its association with Roman excesses and pagan ritual. The red rose was eventually adopted as a symbol of the blood of the Christian martyrs. Roses also later came to be associated with the Virgin Mary.

Rose culture came into its own in Europe in the 1800s with the introduction of perpetual blooming roses from China. There are currently thousands of varieties of roses developed for bloom shape, size, fragrance and even for lack of prickles.