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Cupressus sempervirens

Cupressus sempervirens, the Mediterranean cypress (also known as Italian cypress,[1] Tuscan cypress, Persian cypress, or pencil pine), is a species of cypress native to the eastern Mediterranean region, in northeast Libya, southern Albania, southern and coastal Bulgaria, southern Ukraine (Crimea), coastal Croatia and Slovenia, southern Montenegro, southern Bosnia and Herzegovina, southwestern North Macedonia, southern Greece, southern Turkey, Cyprus, northern Egypt, western Syria, Lebanon, Malta, Italy, southern France, Spain, Palestine, Israel, western Jordan, South Caucasus, and also a disjunct population in Iran.[citation needed]

Mediterranean cypress
Mediterranean Cypress foliage and cones
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnosperms
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Cupressales
Family: Cupressaceae
Genus: Cupressus
Species:
C. sempervirens
Binomial name
Cupressus sempervirens
Green: probable natural range in the Mediterranean Basin
Orange: range including human introductions
Red (small areas): Residual natural stands

Description

Cupressus sempervirens is a medium-sized coniferous evergreen tree to 35 m (115 ft) tall, with a conic crown with level branches and variably loosely hanging branchlets.[2] It is very long-lived, with some trees reported to be over 1,000 years old.[citation needed]

The foliage grows in dense sprays, dark green in colour. The leaves are scale-like, 2–5 mm long, and produced on rounded (not flattened) shoots. The seed cones are ovoid or oblong, 25–40 mm long, with 10-14 scales, green at first, maturing brown about 20–24 months after pollination. The male cones are 3–5 mm long, and release pollen in late winter. It is moderately susceptible to cypress canker, caused by the fungus Seiridium cardinale, and can suffer extensive dieback where this disease is common. The species name sempervirens comes from the Latin for 'evergreen'.[citation needed]

It is also known as "the churchyard cypress," from being often found standing (as if sentinels) surrounding a graveyard.[citation needed]

Uses

Mediterranean cypress has been widely cultivated as an ornamental tree for millennia away from its native range, mainly throughout the whole Mediterranean region, and in other areas with similar hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters, including California, southwest South Africa and southern Australia. It can also be grown successfully in areas with cooler, moister summers, such as the British Isles, New Zealand and the Pacific Northwest (coastal Oregon, Washington and British Columbia). It is also planted in Florida and parts of the coastal southern United States as an ornamental tree. In some areas, particularly the United States, it is known as "Italian" or "Tuscan cypress". Commonly seen throughout New Mexico, the Mediterranean cypress is also known as the "drama tree" because of its tendency to bend with even the slightest of breezes.[citation needed]

 
4000-year-old Cypress of Abarkuh, Iran

The vast majority of the trees in cultivation are selected cultivars with a fastigiate crown, with erect branches forming a narrow to very narrow crown often less than a tenth as wide as the tree is tall. The dark green "exclamation mark" shape of these trees is a highly characteristic signature of Mediterranean town and village landscapes. Formerly, the species was sometimes separated into two varieties, the wild C. sempervirens var. sempervirens (syn. var. horizontalis), and the fastigiate C. s. var. pyramidalis (syn. var. fastigiata, var. stricta), but the latter is now only distinguished as a Cultivar Group, with no botanical significance.[citation needed]

It is also known for its very durable, scented wood, used most famously for the doors of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican City, Rome. Cypress used to be used in distilleries as staves to hold mash ferments to make alcohol before the invention of stainless steel.[citation needed]

In cosmetics it is used as astringent, firming, anti-seborrheic, anti-dandruff, anti-aging and as fragrance.[3] It is also the traditional wood used for Italian harpsichords.[4]

In culture

Iran

 
Stylized Cypress Trees during the Achaemenid empire

Iranians considered cypress to be a relic of Zoroaster, and they believed that Vishtaspa ordered to plant this cypress after converting to Zoroaster. In the words of the Shahnameh, cypress represents a single-minded, professional and wise man. In ancient Iran, at Yalda night, a tree called Yalda tree was decorated, which was generally made of cypress and pine trees. It is said that the decoration of cypress and pine in Christmas was adapted from ancient Iran, because the Iranians looked at these two trees, especially the cypress, as a symbol of resistance against darkness and cold, and they stood in front of the cypress on the first day of January. And they vowed to be strong and stable until the next year and plant another cedar sapling. Also, according to Iranian beliefs, greens at the beginning of the year are a sign of blessing throughout that year, and based on this belief, the custom of planting greens at the beginning of the year and at the same time as Nowruz celebration gradually replaced the Cypress tree. Cypress, Cupressus sempervirens, was the first choice for Iranian gardens. In all of the famous Persian Gardens, such as Fin Garden, Shazdeh Garden, Dowlat-Abad, and others, this tree plays a central role in their design.[citation needed] The oldest living cypress is the Sarv-e-Abarkooh in Iran's Yazd Province. Its age is estimated to be approximately 4,000 years.[5][failed verification]

Symbolism

In classical antiquity, the cypress was a symbol of mourning and in the modern era it remains the principal cemetery tree in both the Muslim world and Europe. In the classical tradition, the cypress was associated with death and the underworld because it failed to regenerate when cut back too severely. Athenian households in mourning were garlanded with boughs of cypress.[6] Cypress was used to fumigate the air during cremations.[7] It was among the plants that were suitable for making wreaths to adorn statues of Pluto, the classical ruler of the underworld.[8]

The poet Ovid, who wrote during the reign of Augustus, records the best-known myth that explains the association of the cypress with grief. The handsome boy Cyparissus, a favorite of Apollo, accidentally killed a beloved tame stag. His grief and remorse were so inconsolable that he asked to weep forever. He was transformed into cupressus sempervirens, with the tree's sap as his tears.[9] In another version of the story, it was the woodland god Silvanus who was the divine companion of Cyparissus and who accidentally killed the stag. When the boy was consumed by grief, Silvanus turned him into a tree, and thereafter carried a branch of cypress as a symbol of mourning.[10]

In Greek mythology, besides Cyparissus, the cypress is also associated with Artemis and Hecate, a goddess of magic, crossroads and the underworld. Ancient Roman funerary rites used it extensively.[citation needed]

The most famous Muslim cemetery in Turkey where C. sempervirens is used widely is Istanbul Karacaahmet Cemetery. In Istanbul Turkish the tree is referred to as "mezarlık servisi" (cemetery tree); its common name in Turkish and the name used in Turkish forestry is "kara selvi" (black cypress). Cypresses are mentioned extensively in the Shahnameh, the great Iranian epic poem by Ferdowsi.[citation needed]

In Jewish tradition, the cypress was held to be the wood used to build Noah's Ark and The Temple, and is mentioned as an idiom or metaphor in biblical passages, either referencing the tree's shape as an example of uprightness or its evergreen nature as an example of eternal beauty or health. It is popular in modern Israeli cemeteries, with contemporary explanation being that its shape resembles a candle and its being an evergreen symbolized the immortality of the soul.[citation needed]

In popular culture the Italian cypress is often stereotypically associated with vacation destinations to the Mediterranean region; Italy in particular. The tree has been seen on travel posters for decades.[11][12]

Other characteristics

In July 2012, a forest fire, lasting five days, devastated 20,000 hectares of forest in the Valencian village of Andilla. However, amid the charred landscape, a group of 946 cypress trees about 22 years old was virtually unharmed, and only 12 cypresses were burned. Andilla cypresses were planted by the CypFire European project studying various aspects of the cypresses, including fire resistance.[13]

References

  1. ^ (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  2. ^ See also Uses section for the differing cultivated variants
  3. ^ Carrasco, F. (2009). "Ingredientes Cosméticos". Diccionario de Ingredientes\ 4ª Ed. www.imagenpersonal.net. p. 267. ISBN 978-84-613-4979-1.
  4. ^ Hubbard, Frank (1965). Three Centuries of Harpsichord Making. Harvard University Press. p. 201. ISBN 0-674-88845-6.
  5. ^ Craig Glenday, ed. (2011). Guinness World Records. BANTAM DELL. p. 95. ISBN 9781904994671.
  6. ^ Servius, note to Vergil's Aeneid 3.680.
  7. ^ Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae 17.7.34.
  8. ^ Natalis Comes, Mythologiae 2.9.
  9. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.106ff.
  10. ^ Servius, note to Vergil's Georgics 1.20.
  11. ^ "Image: Italian_Lakes,_travel_poster_for_ENIT,_ca._1930.jpg, (3091 × 5015 px)". upload.wikimedia.org. 2009-04-15. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
  12. ^ . postercorner.com. Archived from the original on 2015-02-22. Retrieved 2015-09-06.
  13. ^ "The curious case of Valencia's flameproof cypresses". sociedad.elpais.com. 14 August 2012. Retrieved 2015-09-06.

Further reading

  • Farjon, A. 2013 Cupressus sempervirens. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.2
  • Farjon, A. (2005). Monograph of Cupressaceae and Sciadopitys. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. ISBN 1-84246-068-4.
  • Zsolt Debreczy, Istvan Racz (2012). Kathy Musial (ed.). Conifers Around the World (1st ed.). DendroPress. p. 1089. ISBN 978-9632190617.
  • Panconesi, A. 2007 The cypress from myth to future. [Italian] 456 p. Ed. Centro Promozione Pubblicità, ISBN 9788888228204

External links

cupressus, sempervirens, mediterranean, cypress, also, known, italian, cypress, tuscan, cypress, persian, cypress, pencil, pine, species, cypress, native, eastern, mediterranean, region, northeast, libya, southern, albania, southern, coastal, bulgaria, souther. Cupressus sempervirens the Mediterranean cypress also known as Italian cypress 1 Tuscan cypress Persian cypress or pencil pine is a species of cypress native to the eastern Mediterranean region in northeast Libya southern Albania southern and coastal Bulgaria southern Ukraine Crimea coastal Croatia and Slovenia southern Montenegro southern Bosnia and Herzegovina southwestern North Macedonia southern Greece southern Turkey Cyprus northern Egypt western Syria Lebanon Malta Italy southern France Spain Palestine Israel western Jordan South Caucasus and also a disjunct population in Iran citation needed Mediterranean cypressMediterranean Cypress foliage and conesConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade GymnospermsDivision PinophytaClass PinopsidaOrder CupressalesFamily CupressaceaeGenus CupressusSpecies C sempervirensBinomial nameCupressus sempervirensL Green probable natural range in the Mediterranean Basin Orange range including human introductions Red small areas Residual natural stands Contents 1 Description 2 Uses 3 In culture 3 1 Iran 3 2 Symbolism 4 Other characteristics 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksDescription EditCupressus sempervirens is a medium sized coniferous evergreen tree to 35 m 115 ft tall with a conic crown with level branches and variably loosely hanging branchlets 2 It is very long lived with some trees reported to be over 1 000 years old citation needed The foliage grows in dense sprays dark green in colour The leaves are scale like 2 5 mm long and produced on rounded not flattened shoots The seed cones are ovoid or oblong 25 40 mm long with 10 14 scales green at first maturing brown about 20 24 months after pollination The male cones are 3 5 mm long and release pollen in late winter It is moderately susceptible to cypress canker caused by the fungus Seiridium cardinale and can suffer extensive dieback where this disease is common The species name sempervirens comes from the Latin for evergreen citation needed It is also known as the churchyard cypress from being often found standing as if sentinels surrounding a graveyard citation needed Uses EditMediterranean cypress has been widely cultivated as an ornamental tree for millennia away from its native range mainly throughout the whole Mediterranean region and in other areas with similar hot dry summers and mild rainy winters including California southwest South Africa and southern Australia It can also be grown successfully in areas with cooler moister summers such as the British Isles New Zealand and the Pacific Northwest coastal Oregon Washington and British Columbia It is also planted in Florida and parts of the coastal southern United States as an ornamental tree In some areas particularly the United States it is known as Italian or Tuscan cypress Commonly seen throughout New Mexico the Mediterranean cypress is also known as the drama tree because of its tendency to bend with even the slightest of breezes citation needed 4000 year old Cypress of Abarkuh IranThe vast majority of the trees in cultivation are selected cultivars with a fastigiate crown with erect branches forming a narrow to very narrow crown often less than a tenth as wide as the tree is tall The dark green exclamation mark shape of these trees is a highly characteristic signature of Mediterranean town and village landscapes Formerly the species was sometimes separated into two varieties the wild C sempervirens var sempervirens syn var horizontalis and the fastigiate C s var pyramidalis syn var fastigiata var stricta but the latter is now only distinguished as a Cultivar Group with no botanical significance citation needed It is also known for its very durable scented wood used most famously for the doors of St Peter s Basilica in the Vatican City Rome Cypress used to be used in distilleries as staves to hold mash ferments to make alcohol before the invention of stainless steel citation needed In cosmetics it is used as astringent firming anti seborrheic anti dandruff anti aging and as fragrance 3 It is also the traditional wood used for Italian harpsichords 4 In culture EditIran Edit Stylized Cypress Trees during the Achaemenid empireIranians considered cypress to be a relic of Zoroaster and they believed that Vishtaspa ordered to plant this cypress after converting to Zoroaster In the words of the Shahnameh cypress represents a single minded professional and wise man In ancient Iran at Yalda night a tree called Yalda tree was decorated which was generally made of cypress and pine trees It is said that the decoration of cypress and pine in Christmas was adapted from ancient Iran because the Iranians looked at these two trees especially the cypress as a symbol of resistance against darkness and cold and they stood in front of the cypress on the first day of January And they vowed to be strong and stable until the next year and plant another cedar sapling Also according to Iranian beliefs greens at the beginning of the year are a sign of blessing throughout that year and based on this belief the custom of planting greens at the beginning of the year and at the same time as Nowruz celebration gradually replaced the Cypress tree Cypress Cupressus sempervirens was the first choice for Iranian gardens In all of the famous Persian Gardens such as Fin Garden Shazdeh Garden Dowlat Abad and others this tree plays a central role in their design citation needed The oldest living cypress is the Sarv e Abarkooh in Iran s Yazd Province Its age is estimated to be approximately 4 000 years 5 failed verification Symbolism Edit In classical antiquity the cypress was a symbol of mourning and in the modern era it remains the principal cemetery tree in both the Muslim world and Europe In the classical tradition the cypress was associated with death and the underworld because it failed to regenerate when cut back too severely Athenian households in mourning were garlanded with boughs of cypress 6 Cypress was used to fumigate the air during cremations 7 It was among the plants that were suitable for making wreaths to adorn statues of Pluto the classical ruler of the underworld 8 The poet Ovid who wrote during the reign of Augustus records the best known myth that explains the association of the cypress with grief The handsome boy Cyparissus a favorite of Apollo accidentally killed a beloved tame stag His grief and remorse were so inconsolable that he asked to weep forever He was transformed into cupressus sempervirens with the tree s sap as his tears 9 In another version of the story it was the woodland god Silvanus who was the divine companion of Cyparissus and who accidentally killed the stag When the boy was consumed by grief Silvanus turned him into a tree and thereafter carried a branch of cypress as a symbol of mourning 10 In Greek mythology besides Cyparissus the cypress is also associated with Artemis and Hecate a goddess of magic crossroads and the underworld Ancient Roman funerary rites used it extensively citation needed The most famous Muslim cemetery in Turkey where C sempervirens is used widely is Istanbul Karacaahmet Cemetery In Istanbul Turkish the tree is referred to as mezarlik servisi cemetery tree its common name in Turkish and the name used in Turkish forestry is kara selvi black cypress Cypresses are mentioned extensively in the Shahnameh the great Iranian epic poem by Ferdowsi citation needed In Jewish tradition the cypress was held to be the wood used to build Noah s Ark and The Temple and is mentioned as an idiom or metaphor in biblical passages either referencing the tree s shape as an example of uprightness or its evergreen nature as an example of eternal beauty or health It is popular in modern Israeli cemeteries with contemporary explanation being that its shape resembles a candle and its being an evergreen symbolized the immortality of the soul citation needed In popular culture the Italian cypress is often stereotypically associated with vacation destinations to the Mediterranean region Italy in particular The tree has been seen on travel posters for decades 11 12 Cypresses 1889 by Vincent van Gogh Saint Remy de Provence Other van Gogh cypress paintings include Wheat Field with Cypresses and The Starry Night Fastigiate Mediterranean cypress Cupressus sempervirens Stricta planted in HawaiiOther characteristics EditIn July 2012 a forest fire lasting five days devastated 20 000 hectares of forest in the Valencian village of Andilla However amid the charred landscape a group of 946 cypress trees about 22 years old was virtually unharmed and only 12 cypresses were burned Andilla cypresses were planted by the CypFire European project studying various aspects of the cypresses including fire resistance 13 References Edit BSBI List 2007 xls Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland Archived from the original xls on 2015 06 26 Retrieved 2014 10 17 See also Uses section for the differing cultivated variants Carrasco F 2009 Ingredientes Cosmeticos Diccionario de Ingredientes 4ª Ed www imagenpersonal net p 267 ISBN 978 84 613 4979 1 Hubbard Frank 1965 Three Centuries of Harpsichord Making Harvard University Press p 201 ISBN 0 674 88845 6 Craig Glenday ed 2011 Guinness World Records BANTAM DELL p 95 ISBN 9781904994671 Servius note to Vergil s Aeneid 3 680 Isidore of Seville Etymologiae 17 7 34 Natalis Comes Mythologiae 2 9 Ovid Metamorphoses 10 106ff Servius note to Vergil s Georgics 1 20 Image Italian Lakes travel poster for ENIT ca 1930 jpg 3091 5015 px upload wikimedia org 2009 04 15 Retrieved 2015 09 06 Image 01422 2T jpg 300 453 px postercorner com Archived from the original on 2015 02 22 Retrieved 2015 09 06 The curious case of Valencia s flameproof cypresses sociedad elpais com 14 August 2012 Retrieved 2015 09 06 Further reading EditFarjon A 2013 Cupressus sempervirens The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Version 2014 2 Farjon A 2005 Monograph of Cupressaceae and Sciadopitys Royal Botanic Gardens Kew ISBN 1 84246 068 4 Zsolt Debreczy Istvan Racz 2012 Kathy Musial ed Conifers Around the World 1st ed DendroPress p 1089 ISBN 978 9632190617 Panconesi A 2007 The cypress from myth to future Italian 456 p Ed Centro Promozione Pubblicita ISBN 9788888228204External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cupressus sempervirens Cupressus sempervirens information genetic conservation units and related resources from the European Forest Genetic Resources Programme EUFORGEN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cupressus sempervirens amp oldid 1171037902, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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