Varieties of
Eriocapitella japonica are cultivated worldwide, especially in
China,
Japan, and
Korea, where naturalized populations are known to exist. Hundreds of years ago, a form of
E. hupehensis with smaller, semi-double flowers and pink sepals escaped cultivation and spread across China to Japan and Korea. After finding this form in a Shanghai graveyard in 1843, the plant explorer
Robert Fortune sent it home to England where it became known as
E. japonica, the
Japanese anemone. European
horticulturists crossed the Japanese anemone with
E. vitifolia to produce
cultivars of the artificial hybrid
E. × hybrida. 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 4 cultivars of
E. japonica, one of which (
E. japonica 'Prinz Heinrich') had the longest bloom length (65 days) of any cultivar. , the following cultivars have gained the
Award of Garden Merit (AGM) from the
Royal Horticultural Society: •
E. japonica 'Pamina' •
E. japonica 'Rotkäppchen' The cultivar
E. japonica 'Prinz Heinrich' was removed from the AGM list in 2013. ==Bibliography==