Uncle John's Impossible Questions (& Astounding Answers) by Bathroom Readers' Institute
Author:Bathroom Readers' Institute [Bathroom Readers' Institute]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781607106760
Publisher: Portable Press
Published: 2012-08-31T14:00:00+00:00
Perennial Mystery
According to ancient Greek legend, the goddess Aphrodite created it. The Romans used it as a symbol for secrecy (a Roman phrase for âconfidentialityâ is named for it). Ancient Persians spread its oils around the world. It was found in King Tutâs tomb. Early Christians called it the âblood of the martyrs.â During the Dark Ages, monks kept it alive for medicinal use. The English fought for it, and Josephine adored it. What is it?
Perennial Mystery
The rose, and itâs much older than Aphrodite. Paleobotanists have traced its origins to central Asia about 60 to 70 million years ago; the rose remained in the Northern Hemisphere until humans arrived and spread it to south of the equator.
Since the dawn of civilization, people and roses have had a profound connectionâfor medicinal and ornamental purposes alike. In fact, one of the symbols of decadence that led to the fall of the Roman Empire: Rose gardens began to outnumber food gardens. Some Roman dining rooms even had rose vines spreading across the ceiling. What was said at dinner was supposed to remain there, which led to the Latin phrase for âsecrecyââsub rosa, or âunder the rose.â
In 15th-century England, the House of York adopted a white rose; the House of Lancaster, a red rose. When Henry VII finally won the War of the Rosesâand with it the English throneâhe bred the red and the white flowers together to create the Tudor Rose, the official Rose of England.
But it was Napoleonâs wife, Josephine, and her âRose Renaissanceâ that brought the rose into the modern age. She wanted to grow every kind of rose in the world in her gardens. To that end, Napoleon ordered his captains to bring back roses from their conquests. By the end of her life, Josephine had successfully cultivated 250 varieties of the flower. So beloved were her gardens that they sparked a fad of growing ornamental roses throughout Europe and in the New Worldâa fad that persists to this day.
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