Synonyms The history of
N. pseudonarcissus has generated a large number of synonyms, including:
Subspecies There are a number of
subspecies of the wild
daffodil but the exact number varies according to different authors. The large number of
cultivars adds to the difficulty of classification. Among the subspecies is the Tenby daffodil (
N. pseudonarcissus ssp.
obvallaris, sometimes classed as a separate species), which probably originated in cultivation but now grows wild in southwest
Wales. Many of the subspecies listed below are currently considered as species by the
Royal Horticultural Society, the
International Cultivar Registration Authority for daffodils. Those marked are recipients of the RHS
Award of Garden Merit. • ssp.
pseudonarcissus Narcissus pseudonarcissus subsp.
pseudonarcissus – Lent lily, wild daffodil – England and Wales • ssp.
bicolor (syn.
N. bicolor L.) • ssp.
calcicarpetanus Fernández Casas • ssp.
eugeniae – Central Spain (syn.
N. eugeniae Fernández Casas) •
ssp. major – Spanish daffodil, great daffodil – Iberia (syn.
N. hispanicus Gouan.) • ssp.
moschatus (L.) Baker – swan's-neck daffodil (syn. ssp.
candidissimus Desf.; syn.
N. moschatus L.,
N. alpestris Pugsley.) • ssp.
munozii-garmendiae Fernández Casas • ssp.
nevadensis – Iberia (syn.
N. nevadensis Pugsley) • ssp.
nobilis – (syn.
N. nobilis (Haw.) Schult. & Schult.f.) large flower daffodil – Iberia. The largest floral diameter of
Narcissus, at over 12.5 cm • ssp.
obvallaris – Tenby daffodil – southern Wales (syn.
N. obvallaris, Salisb., sometimes considered to be derived from
relict cultivation of ssp.
major [1]) • ssp.
pallidiflorus – pale flower daffodil – Spain and France • ssp.
portensis – Iberia (syn.
N. portensis Pugsley) • ssp.
pugsleyanus Barra & López – Spain • ssp.
radinganorum (syn.
N. radinganorum Fernández Casas) – southeast Spain
Varieties Narcissus pseudonarcissus ssp.
pseudonarcissus itself has many
varieties (described by H.W. Pugsley in an article in the
Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society of 1933), including var.
festinus, var.
humilis, var.
insignis, var.
minoriformis, var.
montinus, var.
platylobus and var.
porrigens. The eighth variety described by Pugsley, var.
pisanus, was further defined by A. Fernandes in the
Daffodil and Tulip Year Book of 1968.
Double-flowered cultivars Recent research in Wales, southwest England and northern France by keen horticulturists has discovered a small number of remarkably distinct, double-flowered specimens of
N. pseudonarcissus growing among wild or naturalised populations of normal
N. pseudonarcissus. Such rare forms were known to exist as long ago as the late 16th and early 17th century by botanists and
herbalists such as
John Gerard and
John Parkinson, who variously described them as "Pseudonarcissus Anglicus flore pleno", "Gerrards double Daffodill" and later "The English Double Daffodil". Bulbs have been collected with the landowners' permission and it is hoped that some of these unusual
cultivars may become commercially available in the future. ==Emblem==