Roses
have
a
long
and
colorful
history.
They
have
been
symbols
of
love,
beauty,
war,
and
politics.
The
rose
is,
according
to
fossil
evidence,
35
million
years
old.
In
nature,
the
genus
Rosa
has
some
150
species
spread
throughout
the
Northern
Hemisphere,
from
Alaska
to
Mexico
and
including
northern
Africa.
Garden
cultivation
of
roses
began
some
5,000
years
ago,
probably
in
China.
During
the
Roman
period,
roses
were
grown
extensively
in
the
Middle
East.
They
were
used
as
confetti
at
celebrations,
for
medicinal
purposes,
and
as a
source
of
perfume.
Roman
nobility
established
large
public
rose
gardens
in
the
south
of
Rome.
After
the
fall
of
the
Roman
Empire,
the
popularity
of
roses
seemed
to
rise
and
fall
depending
on
gardening
trends
of
the
time.
During
the
fifteenth
century,
the
rose
was
used
as a
symbol
for
the
factions
fighting
to
control
England.
The
white
rose
symbolized
York,
and
the
red
rose
symbolized
Lancaster,
as a
result,
the
conflict
became
known
as
the
"War
of
the
Roses."

Roses
were
in
such
high
demand
during
the
seventeenth
century
that
royalty
considered
roses
or
rose
water
as
legal
tender,
and
they
were
often
used
as
barter
and
for
payments.
Napoleon's
wife
Josephine
established
an
extensive
collection
of
roses
at
Chateau
de
Malmaison,
an
estate
seven
miles
west
of
Paris
in
the
1800s.
This
garden
became
the
setting
for
Pierre
Joseph
Redoute's
work
as a
botanical
illustrator.
In
1824,
he
completed
his
watercolor
collection
"Les
Rose,"
which
is
still
considered
one
of
the
finest
records
of
botanical
illustration.