The artificial hybrid
Eriocapitella ×
hybrida was developed at the
gardens of the Royal Horticultural Society in 1848. As reported by
Joseph Paxton at the time, gardeners crossed the so-called Japanese anemone
E. japonica with
E. vitifolia to produce a hardy fall-blooming hybrid with rose-colored flowers. The parent species were previously brought to England from their native Asia:
E. vitifolia was brought from Nepal in 1829 while
E. japonica was brought from China in 1844. European horticulturalists in Great Britain, Germany, and France subsequently introduced dozens of cultivars. Commonly called
Japanese anemone hybrids, the cultivars of
E. ×
hybrida have single, semi-double, or
double flowers with white, pink, or purple sepals. At the
Chicago Botanic Garden, Rudy experimented with 26
cultivars of fall-blooming anemones over a 5-year period beginning in 1998. His experiments included 18 cultivars of
E. ×
hybrida, of which more than half had a bloom length greater than 48 days. , the following cultivars of
E. ×
hybrida have gained the
Award of Garden Merit (AGM) from the
Royal Horticultural Society: •
E. ×
hybrida 'Elegans', also known as
E. ×
hybrida 'Max Vogel' •
E. ×
hybrida 'Honorine Jobert' •
E. ×
hybrida 'Königin Charlotte' ('Queen Charlotte') •
E. ×
hybrida 'September Charm' The cultivars
E. ×
hybrida 'Andrea Atkinson',
E. ×
hybrida 'Lady Gilmour', and
E. ×
hybrida 'Robustissima' were removed from the AGM list in 2013. ==Bibliography==