Choose from 875 items in our Marianne North Collection
403. Vegetation on the Hills near GrahamstownA slender-stemmed arboreous Euphorbia, Crassula coccinea, Linn. the gouty Erythrina caffra, Thunb. Elephants Foot (Testudinaria elephantipes, Lindl.), and bushes of Oldenburgia arbuscula, 1)0
402. Cape ColoursThe white-flowered " Ink Plant" (Cycnium tubatum, Harvey) in front, with the rosy Hibiscus pedunculatus, Thunb. blue Plectranthus
401. Vegetation of the Addo Bush with Kaffirs and their HabitationHanging from the trees in front are nests of a species of social finch different from that on the bullrushes in 400. On the right is an Aloe
722. Group of Nikau Palms, with a background of the Kawa Kawa, New ZealandThe Nikau Palm, Rhopalostylis sapida, Wendl. & Drude (syn. Areca sapida, Soland.) is the most southern member of the order
400. Social Birds and Social Herbs at Malmesbury, South AfricaHere is the familiar Richardia aethiopica, Kuth, of our windows and conservatories, growing gregariously in its native swamps, associated with the almost cosmopolitan bullrush (Typha latifolia)
399. Brunsvigia multiflora, near Queenstown, South AfricaThis Amaryllid is remarkable for its large bulb and inflorescence, the latter appearing each season after the leaves have decayed and disappeared
398. The Hottentot Fig and other Succulents from the KarrooMesembryanthemun edule,, Linn. is the name of one of the plants which yield the fruit called, " Hottentot Fig, " represented hanging down on the left in this painting, with white, yellow
397. A tree of the sea-shore, St. Johns River, KaifrariaHibiscus tiliaceus, Linn. (syn. Paritium tiliaceum, Juss.) is one of the commonest of littoral trees in tropical and subtropical countries
396. A Selection of Flowers from Table Mountain, Cape of Good HoA stout fleshy ground-orchid (Satyrium carneum, R. Br.) with pink flowers; a Tree Daisy (Osmitopsis asteriscoides, Cass.), a blue Pseralea, with three species of Heath (Erica) on the left
395. Buphane toxicaria and other Flowers of GrahamstownBuphane toxicaria, Herb. is the large bulb bearing a single large head of innumerable small red flowers with projecting stamens
394. Star of Bethlehem from AlgiersThis is probably one of the varieties of Ornithogalum narbonense, Linn. in cultivation under the name 0. grandiflorum
392. Two climbing plants of St. Johns, and ButterfliesThe purple pea-flower is apparently a species of Dolichos, and the yellowish green flowers are those of Riocreuxia torulosa, Dcne. Compare this with Ceropegia Sandersoni, Dcne
391. Clivia and Grapnel Plant, South AfricaThe grapnel plant (Harpagophytumn procumbens, DC.) produces one of the most singular seed-vessels known. Its long claw-like appendages terminate in sharp recurved prickles
390. Vegetation on the St. Johns River, KaffrariaThe trees on the right, bearing white flowers, are the White Pear, see 375
389. Cycads. Screw-pines and Bamboos, with Durban in the distancCultivated in the Durban Botanic Garden, though most of the plants are natives of the country. The Cycads are chiefly species of Zamia, with a small plant of the endemic Stangeria paradoxa, T
388. Various species of Hibiscus, with Tecoma and Barleria, NataThe central plant with yellowish white flowers is Hibiscus cannabinus, Linn. with H. surattensis, Linn. above on the left, and H. calycinus, Willd. below it, and one small pale yellow flower of H
387. Aloe and Passionflower, South AfricaThe Aloe flowers in this painting belong to the trunkless species in 386; and the Passionflower (Passiflora edulis, Sims.) is a plant of American origin cultivated and colonised in South Africa
386. Aloes at NatalIn front is a portion of the inflorescence, natural size, of the arboreous one; to the left is a plant of a species which does not form a trunk. It is near, if not true, Aloe latifolia
384. Kaffir Plumtrees overhanging St. Johns River, KaffrarObserve the cord-like climbers attached to the trees, and the tufts of Agapanthus umbellatus on the bank. For flowers and fruit of this tree see 382
383. A Remnant of the Past near Verulam, NatalThis trio of grand old Aloes (Aloe Baines ii, Dyer) was about forty feet high at the time the painting was done, and the only ones in that neighbourhood
382. The Kaffir Plum, painted in the Perie Bush, South AfricaFlowers and fruit of the tree (Harpephyllum caffrum, Bernh.) represented in 384. Panel 115
381. The Knobwood and Flowers of NatalOne of the most singular of South African trees is the Knobhout or Knobwood (Zanthoxylum capense, Harv.), the trunk of which is studded with massive pyramidal excrescences of the bark
379. Mouth of the St. Johns River, Kaifraria, and aboriginal
378. Amatungula in Flower and Fruit and Blue Ipomoea, South AfriPainted at the mouth of the Kowie River. Trees of the Amatungula (Carissca grandiftora) are shown in 363. The Ipomoea is I
377. Crinum Moorei and Honeysuckers, Bashi River, South AfricaThis beautiful Crinum was introduced into the Glasnevin Botanic Garden about twenty years ago, and is now not uncommon in cultivation, and is said to be hardy in the milder parts of the kingdom
375. Flowers of St. Johns in Pondo BasketBeginning on the right at the top, there is the dark blue Coleotrype natalensis, C. B. Clarke, a purplish red Balsam (Impatiens, sp)
373. The Gates of St. Johns River, Kaffraria. 373. The Gates of St. Johns River, KaffrariaBishop Galloways house in the foreground
372. Undercliff and its two Fairies, with Raintree, St. JohnThe botanical affinity of the Raintree has not been ascertained. It is a name given to various trees, notably members of the Leguminosae in different parts of the world in consequence of water
371. Group of Natal FlowersIn the top right hand corner Loranthus natalensis, Meissn. then clusters of the blue Pycnostachys reticulata, Benth. and the white and pink Dombeya Burgessiae, Gerard, the " Zulu Cherry
370. A Tree Euphorbia, NatalThis is E. grandidens, Haw. very much like E. abyssinica, Rausch, which Bruce figures so faithfully in his " Travels" that there is no mistaking its genus, though he stoutly maintained
366. A Cycad in fruit in Mr. Hills Garden, Verulam, NatalBehind on the left a plant of the same. This is Cycas circinalis, Linn. a species having a wide range in the tropics of the Old World, including many islands in Polynesia
365. Strelitzia and Sugar Birds, South AfricaThe genus Strelitzia, of which four or five species are known, is peculiar to South Africa, and its botanical affinity is with the Banana (Musa) and with the travellers tree of Madagascar (Ravenala)
364. View of a Table Mountain from Bishop Colensos House, NatalThe Australian Gum-trees, Indian Bamboos, and other exotic plants in the garden were planted by the Bishop himself
363. Trees from the Artists Hut at St. Johns, South AfricaOn the right the Amatungula, (Carissa grandiflora, E. Mey.) or auntigoulah, as corrupted by the colonists; the best native fruit of the country
362. White and Yellow Everlastings (with varieties of Mantis toOn the right the yellow-flowered Senecio mcacroglossus, DC. a climber with ivy-like leaves; the clustered wholly yellow Helichirysum appendiculatum, Less
361. Papyrus or Paper Reed growing in the Ciane, SicilyIn ancient times the Papyrus (Cyperus Papyrus, Linn.)was a plant of great importance, for from its stems was prepared the paper upon which the Egyptians wrote their books, etc
360. Doum and Date Palms on the Nile above Philae, EgyptAmong Palms the Doum (Hyphaene thebaica, Mart.) is remarkable for having normally a branched trunk, instead of a single trunk with a terminal crown of leaves
359. Looking seaward from the mouth of St. Johns River, KaffrarVarious Aloes and the banana-like Strelitzia augusta, Thunb. on the rocks in the foreground. Flowers of the Strelitzia in 369
358. Ordeal Plant or Tanghin and Parokeets of MadagasearGerbera Tanghin, Hook,, yields a poisonous juice which was formerly much employed in Madagascar to detect and punish crime
357. Blue Lily and large Butterfly, NatalBehind are large tufts of the plant (Agapanthus umbellatus, L Herit.) as it grows in its native haunts. There is a variety with white flowers
355. Morning Glory, NatalThis is Ipomoea rubrocoerulea, Hook. a Mexican species now cultivated in many countries, and covering all the verandahs at Durban, at the time of the artists visit
354. White Convolvulus and Kaffirboom, painted at Durban, NatalThis massive Convolvulacea ( Ipomoea ventricosa, Choisy) is a native of the West Indies. Erythrina caffra Thunb. is the botanical name of the Kaffirboom. Panel 99
353. Cork Trees at Cintra, near LisbonA scene in Da Castros garden, where, according to tradition, the first orange tree in Europe was planted. The Cork-tree is a species of Oak (Quercus suber, Linn.) and the cork is the bark
352. Clivia miniata and Moths, NatalOn the left is a cluster of the ripe fleshy seed-vessels. This plant is better known in gardens as Imantophyllum miniature, Hook. For another fine species of this genus, see 391
350. Red and green Cyrtanthus, Crassula, and Orchids, South AfriOn the left Cyrtanthus obliquus, Ait. with yellow Polystachya pubescens, Reichb. f. and on the right the fleshy-leaved Crassula perfoliata, Linn
349. Male Inflorescence and Foliage of a Screw Pine, NatalSee 66 and 246
348. Fruit de Cythere and Sugar Birds and Nest, SeychellesThe Fruit de Cythere (Spondias dulcis, Forst.) is an introduced and cultivated plant in the Seychelles and Mauritius. Some part of western Polynesia, where it is now widely spread
347. Foliage and Flowers of a South African tree, beautiful butA common small tree or shrub, (Acokanthera venenata, G. Don) especially in the eastern subtropical parts of South Africa, and apparently extending northward into the tropics
Choose your image, Select your licence and Download the media