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The Tale of
the Tulip
By Diana Lawrence,
Extension Master Gardener University of Vermont
If you've managed
to wrestle your tulip bulbs away from the rodents this year, you're
in for a charming display. Of all the flowers blooming first in the
garden, the tulip most grandly says "spring."
I patiently planted
four dozen green and white beauties in front of my house last fall.
Now IÕm eagerly waiting to see if those crushed shells I buried with
them kept the critters at bay. Four hundred years since their introduction
to Holland, tulips are still driving gardeners wild.
The tulip, a member
of the lily family, is native to Persia (The word "tulip" is said to
be a corruption of the Persian word toliban, meaning turban.). Its natural
habitat is mountainous, where it rests beneath thick layers of snow
in winter. The Turks were cultivating the flowers as early as 1000 A.D.
Carolus Clusius, a sixteenth century Dutch botanist and pharmacist who
had received a collection of tulip bulbs and seeds from the Austrian
ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, introduced the flower to the Netherlands.
Clusius planted
tulips at the botanical gardens at the University of Leiden in 1593.
The vibrant colors, scarcity, and novelty of the plant caused an immediate
sensation, and tulips became a status symbol for wealthy aristocrats.
If you thought the
collapse of technology stocks was a nightmare, be glad you weren't around
for Tulipmania in 1637. Demand for tulip bulbs led to a speculative
frenzy that saw people paying $1,500 for a dozen bulbs and selling "futures"
on crops that did not even exist. The sheer beauty of the plant was
to blame for the frenzy, as the tulip could neither be consumed nor
used as medicine.
Between 1634 and
1637, rare cultivars such as the mottled maroon and white "Semper Augustus"
were being sold not per bulb but by weight, the same measurement used
for gold. The craze permeated all classes of Dutch society as homes,
estates, and industries were mortgaged to purchase bulbs that could
then be sold for higher prices.
Eventually, of course,
values could climb no higher, and the market collapsed, leaving tulip
traders and speculators bankrupt overnight. The crash did little to
mar the tulip's reputation, however, and it continues to be a vital
part of the Dutch flower industry and the national flower of Holland.
Fortunately for
New Englanders, you don't have to fly to Europe to see an ocean of Tulipa.
The tulip capital of North America is just a short drive across the
Canadian border.
In 1945, Princess
Juliana of Holland presented the government of Canada with 100,000 tulip
bulbs in recognition of that country's role in sheltering the Dutch
Royal Family and liberating the Netherlands during World War II. The
bulbs were planted in and around Ottawa, Ontario, the nation's capital,
which led to the establishment of the Canadian Tulip Festival.
For ten days in
May, visitors to Ottawa enjoy a spectacular display of millions of tulips
throughout the National Capital region. For more information visit
www.tulipfestival.ca
.
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