fbpx
Wikipedia

Leontopodium nivale

Leontopodium nivale, commonly called edelweiss (German: Alpen-Edelweiß, English pronunciation /ˈdəlvs/ (listen)), is a mountain flower belonging to the daisy or sunflower family Asteraceae. The plant prefers rocky limestone places at about 1,800–3,000 metres (5,900–9,800 ft) altitude. It is non-toxic and has been used in traditional medicine as a remedy against abdominal and respiratory diseases. Its leaves and flowers are covered with dense hairs, which appear to protect the plant from cold, aridity, and ultraviolet radiation.[1] It is a scarce, short-lived flower found in remote mountain areas and has been used as a symbol for alpinism, for rugged beauty and purity associated with the Alps and Carpathians. It is a national symbol, especially of Romania, Austria, Slovenia, Switzerland, and Italy. According to folk tradition, giving this flower to a loved one is a promise of dedication.

Edelweiss
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Leontopodium
Species:
L. nivale
Binomial name
Leontopodium nivale
(Ten.) Huet ex Hand.-Mazz.c
Synonyms

Leontopodium alpinum Colm. ex Cass.

Names

The flower's common name Edelweiß is German, and is a compound of edel "noble" and weiß "white". Slovenian name is planika, meaning mountain girl. In Romania, it is known as floare de colț, which means 'cliffhanger's flower.' The flower is referred to as Stella Alpina in the Italian-speaking Alps and étoile des Alpes in the French Alps, meaning 'star of the Alps.'[2]

Edelweiß was one of several regional names for the plant and achieved wide usage during the first half of the 19th century in the context of early Alpine tourism.[3] Alternative names include Chatzen-Talpen ("cat's paws") and the older Wullbluomen ("wool flower," attested in the 16th century).[4][5]

The scientific name Leontopodium is a latinisation of the Greek leontopódion, "lion's paw".[6] The Latin specific epithet nivale means "white".[7]

Taxonomy

Since 1822, Leontopodium has no longer been considered part of the genus Gnaphalium, but classified alongside it as a distinct genus within the tribe Gnaphalieae.[citation needed] In 2003, Leontopodium alpinum was re-classified as a subspecies of Leontopodium nivale.[8] Thus, the alpine edelweiss is currently recognized as being divided into two subspecies, Leontopodium nivale subsp. alpinum (Cass.) Greuter and Leontopodium nivale subsp. nivale.[9]

Description

The plant's leaves and flowers are covered with white hairs, and appear woolly (tomentose). Flowering stalks of edelweiss can grow to a size of 3–20 centimetres (1–8 in) in the wild, or, up to 40 cm (16 in) in cultivation. Each bloom consists of five to six small yellow clustered spikelet-florets (5 mm, 316 in) surrounded by fuzzy white "petals" (technically, bracts) in a double-star formation. The flowers bloom between July and September.

Conservation

Leontopodium nivale is considered a least concern species by the IUCN.[12] The population of this species declined due to overcollection, but is now protected by laws, ex situ conservation and occurrence in national parks.[12]

Cultivation

Leontopodium nivale is grown in gardens for its interesting inflorescence and silver foliage. It grows in the end of May[13] The plants are short lived and can be grown from seed.[14]

Chemical constituents

Compounds of different classes, such as terpenoids, phenylpropanoids, fatty acids and polyacetylenes are reported in various parts of edelweiss plants.[15] Leoligin was reported as the major lignan constituent.[16]

The edelweiss has been used in traditional folk medicine in the Alps for centuries. Extracts from different parts of plants have been used to treat abdominal pain, respiratory diseases, heart disease, and against diarrhea. That is why it was also known as the bellyache flower for a long time. It was also used by the mountain people as a durable flower ("eternal flower") in dry bouquets. The cosmetics industry became aware of the plant and its extracts a few years ago.[17]

Symbolic uses

 
No.5, Dianthus silvestris, and Gnaphalium leontopodium, (Edelweiss), chromolithograph by Helga von Cramm, with hymn by F. R. Havergal, 1877.
 
Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I and Empress Elisabeth

In the 19th century, the edelweiss became a symbol of the rugged purity of the Alpine region and of its native inhabitants.

The passion for edelweiss, which had previously been neglected, began in the middle of the 19th century. The focus is on an incident from 1856, when the Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I went on a mountain hike to the Pasterzen Glacier on the Großglockner with his wife Sisi. There the emperor picked his wife an edelweiss from the steep rock with the words "The first in my life that I picked myself". The affection for edelweiss was a common feature of the famous couple and this well-known story raised people's attention to this alpine plant.[18]

The plant became known as a symbol of the Austrian Empress Elisabeth. A portrait by the painter Franz Xaver Winterhalter painted in 1865 shows Empress Elisabeth with nine artificial edelweiss stars braided in her hair. The jewelry made of precious metal and diamonds was designed in the years after 1850 by the then court and chamber jeweler Alexander Emanuel Köchert.[19]

With the rise of mountain tourism at the end of the 19th century, the edelweiss became the badge and symbol of alpinists and mountaineers. In order to prevent the extinction of the often picked symbolic species, it was placed under nature protection early on. The edelweiss was soon adopted as a symbol in the logo of numerous alpine clubs and associations. In the Austro-Hungarian Army in particular, the symbolic relationship between defiant, frugal and resilient alpine plants or the required perseverance, agility and cutting edge of the alpine troops was recognized and emphasized and often promoted by badges and designations. The Alpen-Edelweiss was assigned as a badge by Emperor Franz Joseph to troops (three regiments of Kaiserschützen) of the Austro-Hungarian Army intended for use in the mountains. It was worn on the collar of the uniform skirt.[20]

In Berthold Auerbach's novel Edelweiss (1861), the difficulty for an alpinist to acquire an edelweiss flower was exaggerated to the point of claiming: "the possession of one is a proof of unusual daring."[21] This idea at the time was becoming part of the popular mythology of early alpinism.[22] Auerbach's novel appeared in English translation in 1869, prefaced with a quote attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson:

There is a flower known to botanists, one of the same genus with our summer plant called "Life-Everlasting", a Gnaphalium like that, which grows on the most inaccessible cliffs of the Tyrolese mountains, where the chamois dare hardly venture, and which the hunter, tempted by its beauty, and by his love (for it is immensely valued by the Swiss maidens), climbs the cliffs to gather, and is sometimes found dead at the foot, with the flower in his hand. It is called by botanists the Gnaphalium leontopodium, but by the Swiss Edelweisse, which signifies Noble Purity.

Together with the alpine gentian, the edelweiss is also a symbol of lonely peaks and pure air in the Alps today. These plants are celebrated with songs and many souvenirs related to them are sold.[23][better source needed]

Before 1914

 
Kaiserjäger - Sergeant (Oberjäger)
  • The edelweiss was established in 1907 as the sign of the Imperial-Royal Mountain Troops by Emperor Franz Joseph I. These original three Regiments wore their edelweiss on the collar of their uniform. Before 1918 there were also innumerable edelweiss badges in the Habsburg army. These include, for example, the military mountain guide award (ice ax with edelweiss and winding mountain rope), edelweiss emblems on the collar and cap or badges from alpine patrol companies. Many alpine units, commandos and soldiers proudly wore unofficial edelweiss badges.[24]
  • The edelweiss also played a role in the troop designation, which also reflected the special relationship with the mountains. In addition to the "Edelweiss Corps" (k.u.k. XIV. Corps) of Archduke Joseph Ferdinand, an "Edelweiss Division" was formed in the course of the First World War. It essentially consisted of Kaiserjäger of the 3rd and 4th regiments, the Salzburg infantry regiment "Archduke Rainer" No. 59 and the Upper Austrian infantry regiment "Grand Duke of Hesse and the Rhine" No. 14. In 1915, World War I, the edelweiss was granted to the German alpine troops for their bravery.[24] Today, it is still the insignia of the Austrian, French, Slovenian, Polish, Romanian, and German alpine troops.
  • In the Swiss Army, the highest ranks (brigadier general and higher) have badges in the form of edelweiss flowers, where other military branch badges would have stars.

World Wars

  • The song Stelutis alpinis (Friulian for "alpine edelweiss"), written by Arturo Zardini when he was an evacuee due to World War I, is now considered the unofficial anthem of Friuli[25]
  • The soldiers of the Austro-Hungarian army named a position right next to the Valparola Pass as the "Edelweiss position" during World War I.[26]
  • The song Es war ein Edelweiss was written by Herms Niel for soldiers during World War II
  • The edelweiss was a badge of the Edelweiss Pirates, anti-Nazi youth groups in the Third Reich, and was worn on clothes (such as a blouse or a suit).
  • The edelweiss was the symbol of Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS Gebirgsjäger, or mountain rangers worn as a metal pin on the left side of the mountain cap, on the band of the service dress cap, and as a patch on the right sleeve. It is still the symbol of the mountain brigade in the German Army.
  • The World War II Luftwaffe unit Kampfgeschwader 51 (51st Bomber Wing) was known as the Edelweiss Wing.
  • Operation "Edelweiss" was a project of the US Office of Strategic Services to get information about Hitler's Alpine Fortress in 1945.

After 1945

  • The edelweiss is worn by troops in the 1st Battalion of the United States Army's 10th Special Forces Group, who adopted the symbol under the command of Colonel Aaron Bank after it had occupied a Waffen SS officer school (Junkerschule) at Flint Kaserne.
  • A song, "Edelweiss", was written for Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical The Sound of Music (1959).
  • Since 2002, the Austrian 2 euro cent coin has depicted an edelweiss. From 1959 to 2001, the one-schilling coin depicted a bunch of three flowers.
  • It is the symbol of the Bulgarian Tourist Union[27] and the Bulgarian Mountain Control and Lifeguard Service.[28]
  • It is also the symbol of the Swiss national tourism organisation.[29]
  • It is featured on the Romanian fifty-lei note.
  • An Austrian brand of beer is Edelweiß.
  • The edelweiss is used in the logotypes of several alpine clubs such as the Deutscher Alpenverein (German Alpine Club), the Österreichischer Alpenverein (Austrian Alpine Club), the Societá Alpina Friulana (Friulian Alpine Club[30]) or the Alpenverein Südtirol (South Tyrol Alpine Club). The edelweiss is also used in the logotype of the Union of International Mountain Leader Associations (UIMLA).
  • The Südtiroler Volkspartei (South Tyrolean People's Party) uses the flower as its logo.
  • In Asterix in Switzerland (1970), the plot is driven by a quest to find edelweiss in the Swiss mountains and bring a bloom back to Gaul to cure a poisoned Roman quaestor.
  • Edelweiss Air, an international airline based in Switzerland, is named after the flower, which also appears in its logo.
  • The musician Moondog composed the song "High on a Rocky Ledge," inspired by the Edelweiss flower.
  • "Bring me Edelweiss" is the best-known song of the music group Edelweiss.
  • Polish professional ice hockey team MMKS Podhale Nowy Targ uses an edelweiss as its emblem.
  • Edelweiss Lodge and Resort is a military resort located in Garmisch, Germany.
  • The song La Belle Fleur Sauvage by Lord Huron has lyrics inspired by the tradition of presenting a loved one with an edelweiss.
  • In the 7th instalment of the Dark Parables franchise, the Snow Edelweiss flower is revealed to be the flower associated with the Snow Queen, Snow White, the counterpart to her fraternal twin brother, Prince Ross Red of the Fiery Rosa flower.
  • In HBO's 2001 mini series Band of Brothers, edelweiss is found on a dead German soldier's uniform. When asked about this, Captain Lewis Nixon replied, "That's edelweiss. It grows in the mountains, above the treeline. Which means he climbed up there to get it. Supposed to be the mark of a true soldier."
  • In the Korean drama Crash Landing on You, Ri Jyeong Hyuk gives Yoon Se-ri a potted edelweiss. He later asks her to meet him "where the edelweiss grows", referring to the Jungfrau region where they later meet again.
  • Edelweiss is used as a symbol by 10th Mountain Assault Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. In February 2023 the brigade was granted the honorific "Edelweiss" by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.[31]
  • After Lithuania regained its independence, children of German descent living in Lithuania formed the Edelweiss community, later renamed the Edelweiss-Wolfskinder (Wolf children).[32]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Vigneron, Jean Pol; Marie Rassart; Zofia Vértesy; Krisztián Kertész; Michaël Sarrazin; László P. Biró; Damien Ertz; Virginie Lousse (January 2005). "Optical structure and function of the white filamentary hair covering the edelweiss bracts". Physical Review E. 71 (1): 011906. arXiv:0710.2695. Bibcode:2005PhRvE..71a1906V. doi:10.1103/physreve.71.011906. PMID 15697629. S2CID 36857838.
  2. ^ William Shepard Walsh (1909). Handy-book of literary curiosities. J.B. Lippincott Co. pp. 268–. Retrieved 2010-08-19.
  3. ^ Edelweiss reported as common name alongside Alpen-Ruhrkraut in Kittel, Taschenbuch der Flora Deutschlands zum bequemen Gebrauch auf botanischen Excursionen (1837), p. 383.
  4. ^ Aretius, Stocc-Hornii et Nessi [...] description [...], a Benedicto Are [...] dictate., published with Valerii Cordi Simesusii Annotationes in Pedacii Dioscoridis Anazarbei de Medica materia libros V, Basel (1561), ed. Bratschi (1992) in Niesen und Stockhorn. Berg-Besteigungen im 16. Jahrhunder.
  5. ^ Schweizerisches Idiotikon 16.1997 2013-12-13 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ λέων, πόδιον, πούς. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  7. ^ Harrison, Lorraine (2012). RHS Latin for Gardeners. United Kingdom: Mitchell Beazley. ISBN 978-1845337315.
  8. ^ "Leontopodium nivale subsp. alpinum (Cass.) Greuter". www.worldfloraonline.org. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  9. ^ "Leontopodium nivale (Ten.) Huet ex Hand.-Mazz. — The Plant List". www.theplantlist.org. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  10. ^ NOTE: Sometimes mistaken for a different species (reference only).
  11. ^ NOTE: Image courtesy of Bernd Haynold (reference only).
  12. ^ a b Khela, S. (2013). "Leontopodium alpinum". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2013: e.T202984A2758405. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2013-2.RLTS.T202984A2758405.en. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  13. ^ Mineo, Baldassare (1999). Rock garden plants: a color encyclopedia. Portland, Or.: Timber Press. pp. 150. ISBN 978-0-88192-432-9.
  14. ^ McVicar, Jekka (2003). Seeds: The Ultimate Guide to Growing Successfully from Seed. The Lyons Press. pp. 22. ISBN 978-1-58574-874-7.
  15. ^ Tauchen, J. & Kokoska, L. Phytochem Rev (2017) 16: 295. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11101-016-9474-0
  16. ^ Wang L, Ladurner A, Latkolik S, Schwaiger S, Linder T, Hošek J, Palme V, Schilcher N, Polanský O, Heiss EH, Stangl H, Mihovilovic MD, Stuppner H, Dirsch VM, Atanasov AG. Leoligin, the Major Lignan from Edelweiss (Leontopodium nivale subsp. alpinum), Promotes Cholesterol Efflux from THP-1 Macrophages. J Nat Prod. 2016 Jun 24;79(6):1651-7. doi: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.6b00227.
  17. ^ Alexandra Grass "Edelweiß ist Heilpflanze des Jahres 2019 (German: Edelweiss is Medicinal Plant of the Year 2019)" In: Wiener Zeitung 24.01.2019.
  18. ^ Ernst Moriz Kronfeld, Das Edelweiß, Hugo Heller & Cie., Vienna 1910 - In: Georg Weindl: Die ewige Liebe zum Edelweiß. In: Almanach – 3 Zinnen Dolomiten, Nr. 50, 2019, p 68.
  19. ^ Michaela Ernst: Sisi-Stern: Das berühmteste Schmuckstück aus Österreich. In: profil. 10. April 2014.
  20. ^ Hermann Hinterstoisser: Das Edelweiß – Alpenblume mit Symbolkraft. In: Truppendienst, 2012, Nr. 5/329. Das Edelweiß
  21. ^ Berthold Auerbach (1869). Edelweiss: A story. Roberts Brothers. p. 77.
  22. ^ "Chamois hunting". New monthly magazine and universal register. 1853. p. 166.
  23. ^ Justina Schreiber. "Edelweiß und Enzian". BR Bayern 2, 25 December 2011.
  24. ^ a b Hermann Hinterstoisser: Das Edelweiß – Alpenblume mit Symbolkraft. In: Truppendienst (Austrian Army), 2012, Nr. 5/329.
  25. ^ (in Italian) Screm, Alessio (April 6, 2016). "I friulani scelgono il loro inno: è “Stelutis alpinis” di Zardini" [1]. Messaggero Veneto. Retrieved 2017-03-10.
  26. ^ "Valparolapass: Die Edelweißstellung schloss die offene Flanke der Österreicher". Oct 12, 2020. Retrieved Sep 17, 2022.
  27. ^ "Български Туристически Съюз". Български Туристически Съюз. Retrieved Sep 17, 2022.
  28. ^ "Начална страница". www.pss-bg.bg. Retrieved Sep 17, 2022.
  29. ^ . Aug 26, 2009. Archived from the original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved Sep 17, 2022.
  30. ^ "IL NUOVO LOGO DELLA SAF: EVOLUZIONE DI UN SIMBOLO – Societa Alpina Friulana". /www.alpinafriulana.it. Retrieved Sep 17, 2022.
  31. ^ Zelenskyy awards special honourable title to the 10th Separate Mountain Assault Brigade, Ukrainska Pravda (14 February 2023)
  32. ^ "Vilko vaikai".
  33. ^ NOTE: DAV on this pin means Deutscher Alpenverein not Disabled American Veterans for which such pins may be confused (reference only).
  34. ^ NOTE: CIECM meaning Centre d' Instruction et d' Entraînement au Combat en Montagne (reference only).

External links

  Media related to Leontopodium nivale at Wikimedia Commons

leontopodium, nivale, other, lion, foot, leontice, leontopetalum, edelweiss, redirects, here, other, uses, edelweiss, disambiguation, commonly, called, edelweiss, german, alpen, edelweiß, english, pronunciation, listen, mountain, flower, belonging, daisy, sunf. For the other Lion s foot see Leontice leontopetalum Edelweiss redirects here For other uses see Edelweiss disambiguation Leontopodium nivale commonly called edelweiss German Alpen Edelweiss English pronunciation ˈ eɪ d el v aɪ s listen is a mountain flower belonging to the daisy or sunflower family Asteraceae The plant prefers rocky limestone places at about 1 800 3 000 metres 5 900 9 800 ft altitude It is non toxic and has been used in traditional medicine as a remedy against abdominal and respiratory diseases Its leaves and flowers are covered with dense hairs which appear to protect the plant from cold aridity and ultraviolet radiation 1 It is a scarce short lived flower found in remote mountain areas and has been used as a symbol for alpinism for rugged beauty and purity associated with the Alps and Carpathians It is a national symbol especially of Romania Austria Slovenia Switzerland and Italy According to folk tradition giving this flower to a loved one is a promise of dedication EdelweissConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder AsteralesFamily AsteraceaeGenus LeontopodiumSpecies L nivaleBinomial nameLeontopodium nivale Ten Huet ex Hand Mazz cSynonymsLeontopodium alpinum Colm ex Cass Contents 1 Names 2 Taxonomy 3 Description 4 Conservation 5 Cultivation 6 Chemical constituents 7 Symbolic uses 7 1 Before 1914 7 2 World Wars 7 3 After 1945 7 4 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksNames EditThe flower s common name Edelweiss is German and is a compound of edel noble and weiss white Slovenian name is planika meaning mountain girl In Romania it is known as floare de colț which means cliffhanger s flower The flower is referred to as Stella Alpina in the Italian speaking Alps and etoile des Alpes in the French Alps meaning star of the Alps 2 Edelweiss was one of several regional names for the plant and achieved wide usage during the first half of the 19th century in the context of early Alpine tourism 3 Alternative names include Chatzen Talpen cat s paws and the older Wullbluomen wool flower attested in the 16th century 4 5 The scientific name Leontopodium is a latinisation of the Greek leontopodion lion s paw 6 The Latin specific epithet nivale means white 7 Taxonomy EditSince 1822 Leontopodium has no longer been considered part of the genus Gnaphalium but classified alongside it as a distinct genus within the tribe Gnaphalieae citation needed In 2003 Leontopodium alpinum was re classified as a subspecies of Leontopodium nivale 8 Thus the alpine edelweiss is currently recognized as being divided into two subspecies Leontopodium nivale subsp alpinum Cass Greuter and Leontopodium nivale subsp nivale 9 Description EditThe plant s leaves and flowers are covered with white hairs and appear woolly tomentose Flowering stalks of edelweiss can grow to a size of 3 20 centimetres 1 8 in in the wild or up to 40 cm 16 in in cultivation Each bloom consists of five to six small yellow clustered spikelet florets 5 mm 3 16 in surrounded by fuzzy white petals technically bracts in a double star formation The flowers bloom between July and September Early season version with central floret pods not yet fully developed Specimen found in Poland s Tatra Mountains Typical mid season appearance Specimen found in Italy s Bergamo Alps Late season version with fat appearance from flowered out central floret pods and from longer petal fuzz 10 Specimen found in the Stubai Alps 11 Botanic illustration Several edelweiss together with the typical growth form in the Zillertal Alps in South Tyrol Conservation EditLeontopodium nivale is considered a least concern species by the IUCN 12 The population of this species declined due to overcollection but is now protected by laws ex situ conservation and occurrence in national parks 12 Cultivation EditLeontopodium nivale is grown in gardens for its interesting inflorescence and silver foliage It grows in the end of May 13 The plants are short lived and can be grown from seed 14 Chemical constituents EditCompounds of different classes such as terpenoids phenylpropanoids fatty acids and polyacetylenes are reported in various parts of edelweiss plants 15 Leoligin was reported as the major lignan constituent 16 The edelweiss has been used in traditional folk medicine in the Alps for centuries Extracts from different parts of plants have been used to treat abdominal pain respiratory diseases heart disease and against diarrhea That is why it was also known as the bellyache flower for a long time It was also used by the mountain people as a durable flower eternal flower in dry bouquets The cosmetics industry became aware of the plant and its extracts a few years ago 17 Symbolic uses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Leontopodium nivale news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message No 5 Dianthus silvestris and Gnaphalium leontopodium Edelweiss chromolithograph by Helga von Cramm with hymn by F R Havergal 1877 Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I and Empress Elisabeth In the 19th century the edelweiss became a symbol of the rugged purity of the Alpine region and of its native inhabitants The passion for edelweiss which had previously been neglected began in the middle of the 19th century The focus is on an incident from 1856 when the Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I went on a mountain hike to the Pasterzen Glacier on the Grossglockner with his wife Sisi There the emperor picked his wife an edelweiss from the steep rock with the words The first in my life that I picked myself The affection for edelweiss was a common feature of the famous couple and this well known story raised people s attention to this alpine plant 18 The plant became known as a symbol of the Austrian Empress Elisabeth A portrait by the painter Franz Xaver Winterhalter painted in 1865 shows Empress Elisabeth with nine artificial edelweiss stars braided in her hair The jewelry made of precious metal and diamonds was designed in the years after 1850 by the then court and chamber jeweler Alexander Emanuel Kochert 19 With the rise of mountain tourism at the end of the 19th century the edelweiss became the badge and symbol of alpinists and mountaineers In order to prevent the extinction of the often picked symbolic species it was placed under nature protection early on The edelweiss was soon adopted as a symbol in the logo of numerous alpine clubs and associations In the Austro Hungarian Army in particular the symbolic relationship between defiant frugal and resilient alpine plants or the required perseverance agility and cutting edge of the alpine troops was recognized and emphasized and often promoted by badges and designations The Alpen Edelweiss was assigned as a badge by Emperor Franz Joseph to troops three regiments of Kaiserschutzen of the Austro Hungarian Army intended for use in the mountains It was worn on the collar of the uniform skirt 20 In Berthold Auerbach s novel Edelweiss 1861 the difficulty for an alpinist to acquire an edelweiss flower was exaggerated to the point of claiming the possession of one is a proof of unusual daring 21 This idea at the time was becoming part of the popular mythology of early alpinism 22 Auerbach s novel appeared in English translation in 1869 prefaced with a quote attributed to Ralph Waldo Emerson There is a flower known to botanists one of the same genus with our summer plant called Life Everlasting a Gnaphalium like that which grows on the most inaccessible cliffs of the Tyrolese mountains where the chamois dare hardly venture and which the hunter tempted by its beauty and by his love for it is immensely valued by the Swiss maidens climbs the cliffs to gather and is sometimes found dead at the foot with the flower in his hand It is called by botanists the Gnaphalium leontopodium but by the Swiss Edelweisse which signifies Noble Purity Together with the alpine gentian the edelweiss is also a symbol of lonely peaks and pure air in the Alps today These plants are celebrated with songs and many souvenirs related to them are sold 23 better source needed Before 1914 Edit Kaiserjager Sergeant Oberjager The edelweiss was established in 1907 as the sign of the Imperial Royal Mountain Troops by Emperor Franz Joseph I These original three Regiments wore their edelweiss on the collar of their uniform Before 1918 there were also innumerable edelweiss badges in the Habsburg army These include for example the military mountain guide award ice ax with edelweiss and winding mountain rope edelweiss emblems on the collar and cap or badges from alpine patrol companies Many alpine units commandos and soldiers proudly wore unofficial edelweiss badges 24 The edelweiss also played a role in the troop designation which also reflected the special relationship with the mountains In addition to the Edelweiss Corps k u k XIV Corps of Archduke Joseph Ferdinand an Edelweiss Division was formed in the course of the First World War It essentially consisted of Kaiserjager of the 3rd and 4th regiments the Salzburg infantry regiment Archduke Rainer No 59 and the Upper Austrian infantry regiment Grand Duke of Hesse and the Rhine No 14 In 1915 World War I the edelweiss was granted to the German alpine troops for their bravery 24 Today it is still the insignia of the Austrian French Slovenian Polish Romanian and German alpine troops In the Swiss Army the highest ranks brigadier general and higher have badges in the form of edelweiss flowers where other military branch badges would have stars World Wars Edit The song Stelutis alpinis Friulian for alpine edelweiss written by Arturo Zardini when he was an evacuee due to World War I is now considered the unofficial anthem of Friuli 25 The soldiers of the Austro Hungarian army named a position right next to the Valparola Pass as the Edelweiss position during World War I 26 The song Es war ein Edelweiss was written by Herms Niel for soldiers during World War II The edelweiss was a badge of the Edelweiss Pirates anti Nazi youth groups in the Third Reich and was worn on clothes such as a blouse or a suit The edelweiss was the symbol of Wehrmacht and Waffen SS Gebirgsjager or mountain rangers worn as a metal pin on the left side of the mountain cap on the band of the service dress cap and as a patch on the right sleeve It is still the symbol of the mountain brigade in the German Army The World War II Luftwaffe unit Kampfgeschwader 51 51st Bomber Wing was known as the Edelweiss Wing Operation Edelweiss was a project of the US Office of Strategic Services to get information about Hitler s Alpine Fortress in 1945 After 1945 Edit The edelweiss is worn by troops in the 1st Battalion of the United States Army s 10th Special Forces Group who adopted the symbol under the command of Colonel Aaron Bank after it had occupied a Waffen SS officer school Junkerschule at Flint Kaserne A song Edelweiss was written for Rodgers and Hammerstein s musical The Sound of Music 1959 Since 2002 the Austrian 2 euro cent coin has depicted an edelweiss From 1959 to 2001 the one schilling coin depicted a bunch of three flowers It is the symbol of the Bulgarian Tourist Union 27 and the Bulgarian Mountain Control and Lifeguard Service 28 It is also the symbol of the Swiss national tourism organisation 29 It is featured on the Romanian fifty lei note An Austrian brand of beer is Edelweiss The edelweiss is used in the logotypes of several alpine clubs such as the Deutscher Alpenverein German Alpine Club the Osterreichischer Alpenverein Austrian Alpine Club the Societa Alpina Friulana Friulian Alpine Club 30 or the Alpenverein Sudtirol South Tyrol Alpine Club The edelweiss is also used in the logotype of the Union of International Mountain Leader Associations UIMLA The Sudtiroler Volkspartei South Tyrolean People s Party uses the flower as its logo In Asterix in Switzerland 1970 the plot is driven by a quest to find edelweiss in the Swiss mountains and bring a bloom back to Gaul to cure a poisoned Roman quaestor Edelweiss Air an international airline based in Switzerland is named after the flower which also appears in its logo The musician Moondog composed the song High on a Rocky Ledge inspired by the Edelweiss flower Bring me Edelweiss is the best known song of the music group Edelweiss Polish professional ice hockey team MMKS Podhale Nowy Targ uses an edelweiss as its emblem Edelweiss Lodge and Resort is a military resort located in Garmisch Germany The song La Belle Fleur Sauvage by Lord Huron has lyrics inspired by the tradition of presenting a loved one with an edelweiss In the 7th instalment of the Dark Parables franchise the Snow Edelweiss flower is revealed to be the flower associated with the Snow Queen Snow White the counterpart to her fraternal twin brother Prince Ross Red of the Fiery Rosa flower In HBO s 2001 mini series Band of Brothers edelweiss is found on a dead German soldier s uniform When asked about this Captain Lewis Nixon replied That s edelweiss It grows in the mountains above the treeline Which means he climbed up there to get it Supposed to be the mark of a true soldier In the Korean drama Crash Landing on You Ri Jyeong Hyuk gives Yoon Se ri a potted edelweiss He later asks her to meet him where the edelweiss grows referring to the Jungfrau region where they later meet again Edelweiss is used as a symbol by 10th Mountain Assault Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces In February 2023 the brigade was granted the honorific Edelweiss by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy 31 After Lithuania regained its independence children of German descent living in Lithuania formed the Edelweiss community later renamed the Edelweiss Wolfskinder Wolf children 32 Gallery Edit Some symbolic use from ancient times to the present World War One era nail fundraiser monument the Iron Edelweiss of Enns Austria 1963 German mountain sport pin German Alpine Club logo pin 33 On a Romanian fifty lei note Logo of the Union of International Mountain Leader Associations Logo of Croatian Mountain Rescue Service Aircraft livery of Edelweiss Air Nazi era nose art on a bomber from the Edelweiss Wing KG 51 Nazi era photo with KG 51 insignia on a Ju 88 bomber 1939 Nazi era aircraft nose art French mountain troops school emblem 34 Logo of German sports association RMSV Rank insignia in the Swiss postal service German Federal Police rank insignia patch Kyrgyz postage stamp from 1994 West German postage stamp from 1975 On 2004 Swiss coin On 1925 gold 100 Swiss francs coin Kazakhstan 500 tenge coin Four Star rank insignia of the top Swiss general West German military Allgau fighter bomber group 1958 2003 West German military 23rd mountain rifles troops emblem Insignia of the Polish Army Podhale Rifles Insignia of the Polish Army 21st Podhale Rifles Brigade Russian military 17 OSN Edelweiss emblem Arms of Vaujany France Arms of Au Austria Arms of the county of Brașov Romania Arms of Dramsha Bulgaria Arms of Bonnefamille France Arms of Chamonix Mont Blanc France Arms of Carroz d Araches France Arms of Eisenarzt Germany Logo of Edelweiss Beer General s star on the saddle of World War I era Swiss commander Ulrich Wille On the hat and collar circa 1933 of Austria s Engelbert Dollfuss Imperial Roman tombstone of Austrian soldier Marius son of Ructinus Bird s eye view of farm Edelweiss 11 km west of Stampriet NamibiaSee also EditFlora of the Alps Golden age of alpinismReferences Edit Vigneron Jean Pol Marie Rassart Zofia Vertesy Krisztian Kertesz Michael Sarrazin Laszlo P Biro Damien Ertz Virginie Lousse January 2005 Optical structure and function of the white filamentary hair covering the edelweiss bracts Physical Review E 71 1 011906 arXiv 0710 2695 Bibcode 2005PhRvE 71a1906V doi 10 1103 physreve 71 011906 PMID 15697629 S2CID 36857838 William Shepard Walsh 1909 Handy book of literary curiosities J B Lippincott Co pp 268 Retrieved 2010 08 19 Edelweiss reported as common name alongside Alpen Ruhrkraut in Kittel Taschenbuch der Flora Deutschlands zum bequemen Gebrauch auf botanischen Excursionen 1837 p 383 Aretius Stocc Hornii et Nessi description a Benedicto Are dictate published with Valerii Cordi Simesusii Annotationes in Pedacii Dioscoridis Anazarbei de Medica materia libros V Basel 1561 ed Bratschi 1992 in Niesen und Stockhorn Berg Besteigungen im 16 Jahrhunder Schweizerisches Idiotikon 16 1997 Archived 2013 12 13 at the Wayback Machine lewn podion poys Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Harrison Lorraine 2012 RHS Latin for Gardeners United Kingdom Mitchell Beazley ISBN 978 1845337315 Leontopodium nivale subsp alpinum Cass Greuter www worldfloraonline org Retrieved 2022 05 16 Leontopodium nivale Ten Huet ex Hand Mazz The Plant List www theplantlist org Retrieved 2017 09 07 NOTE Sometimes mistaken for a different species reference only NOTE Image courtesy of Bernd Haynold reference only a b Khela S 2013 Leontopodium alpinum IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2013 e T202984A2758405 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2013 2 RLTS T202984A2758405 en Retrieved 13 November 2021 Mineo Baldassare 1999 Rock garden plants a color encyclopedia Portland Or Timber Press pp 150 ISBN 978 0 88192 432 9 McVicar Jekka 2003 Seeds The Ultimate Guide to Growing Successfully from Seed The Lyons Press pp 22 ISBN 978 1 58574 874 7 Tauchen J amp Kokoska L Phytochem Rev 2017 16 295 https doi org 10 1007 s11101 016 9474 0 Wang L Ladurner A Latkolik S Schwaiger S Linder T Hosek J Palme V Schilcher N Polansky O Heiss EH Stangl H Mihovilovic MD Stuppner H Dirsch VM Atanasov AG Leoligin the Major Lignan from Edelweiss Leontopodium nivale subsp alpinum Promotes Cholesterol Efflux from THP 1 Macrophages J Nat Prod 2016 Jun 24 79 6 1651 7 doi 10 1021 acs jnatprod 6b00227 Alexandra Grass Edelweiss ist Heilpflanze des Jahres 2019 German Edelweiss is Medicinal Plant of the Year 2019 In Wiener Zeitung 24 01 2019 Ernst Moriz Kronfeld Das Edelweiss Hugo Heller amp Cie Vienna 1910 In Georg Weindl Die ewige Liebe zum Edelweiss In Almanach 3 Zinnen Dolomiten Nr 50 2019 p 68 Michaela Ernst Sisi Stern Das beruhmteste Schmuckstuck aus Osterreich In profil 10 April 2014 Hermann Hinterstoisser Das Edelweiss Alpenblume mit Symbolkraft In Truppendienst 2012 Nr 5 329 Das Edelweiss Berthold Auerbach 1869 Edelweiss A story Roberts Brothers p 77 Chamois hunting New monthly magazine and universal register 1853 p 166 Justina Schreiber Edelweiss und Enzian BR Bayern 2 25 December 2011 a b Hermann Hinterstoisser Das Edelweiss Alpenblume mit Symbolkraft In Truppendienst Austrian Army 2012 Nr 5 329 in Italian Screm Alessio April 6 2016 I friulani scelgono il loro inno e Stelutis alpinis di Zardini 1 Messaggero Veneto Retrieved 2017 03 10 Valparolapass Die Edelweissstellung schloss die offene Flanke der Osterreicher Oct 12 2020 Retrieved Sep 17 2022 Blgarski Turisticheski Syuz Blgarski Turisticheski Syuz Retrieved Sep 17 2022 Nachalna stranica www pss bg bg Retrieved Sep 17 2022 Vacation Travel Meetings Typically Swiss Switzerland Tourism Aug 26 2009 Archived from the original on 26 August 2009 Retrieved Sep 17 2022 IL NUOVO LOGO DELLA SAF EVOLUZIONE DI UN SIMBOLO Societa Alpina Friulana www alpinafriulana it Retrieved Sep 17 2022 Zelenskyy awards special honourable title to the 10th Separate Mountain Assault Brigade Ukrainska Pravda 14 February 2023 Vilko vaikai NOTE DAV on this pin means Deutscher Alpenverein not Disabled American Veterans for which such pins may be confused reference only NOTE CIECM meaning Centre d Instruction et d Entrainement au Combat en Montagne reference only External links Edit Media related to Leontopodium nivale at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leontopodium nivale amp oldid 1151076784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.