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  2. Persicaria tinctoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persicaria_tinctoria

    Common names include Chinese indigo, Japanese indigo and dyer's knotweed. [2] [3] [4] It is native to Eastern Europe and Asia. The leaves are a source of indigo dye. It was already in use in the Western Zhou period (c. 1045 BC – 771 BC), and was the most important blue dye in East Asia until the arrival of Indigofera from the south.

  3. Indigofera tinctoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigofera_tinctoria

    True indigo is a shrub 1–2 metres (3 ft 3 in – 6 ft 7 in) high. It may be an annual, biennial, or perennial, depending on the climate in which it is grown. It has light green pinnate leaves and sheafs of pink or violet flowers. The rotenoids deguelin, dehydrodeguelin, rotenol, rotenone, tephrosin and sumatrol can be found in I. tinctoria. [3]

  4. Gurney's Seed and Nursery Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gurney's_Seed_and_Nursery...

    Upon Charles W. Gurney's death in 1913, his sons and nephew continued the seed and nursery business. In 1919, Deloss Butler Gurney, one of the Colonel's sons, became CEO. The company diversified and grew quickly. By 1924, the Gurney seed house was one of the largest in the world, receiving orders from 46 of the 50 states and many foreign ...

  5. Aeschynomene indica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeschynomene_indica

    Aeschynomene indica is a species of flowering plant in the legume family.Common names include Indian jointvetch, kat sola, [2] budda pea, curly indigo, hard sola, northern jointvetch, [3] indische Schampflanze (), angiquinho, maricazinho, papquinha, pinheirinho (Brazilian Portuguese), [4] he meng (), kusanemu (), diya siyambala (), and ikin sihk ().

  6. Indigofera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigofera

    Scraps of Indigo-dyed fabric likely dyed with plants from the genus Indigofera discovered at Huaca Prieta predate Egyptian indigo-dyed fabrics by more than 1,500 years. [8] Colonial planters in the Caribbean grew indigo and transplanted its cultivation when they settled in the colony of South Carolina and North Carolina where people of the ...

  7. Japanese citrus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_citrus

    Tachibana Unshū Iyokan Dekopon (Hallabong, Sumo Citrus). Japanese citrus fruits were first mentioned in the Kojiki and Nihonshoki, compiled in the 700s, and the Man'yōshū and Kokin Wakashū, poetry anthologies compiled in the 700s and 900s, mention the Tachibana orange as a subject of waka poetry and describe its use as a medicinal, ornamental, and incense plant.

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