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1. Life / The Natural World / Ecology & the Environment / Important Trees at Kew Gardens
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Oriental Plane - Platanus orientalis

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Entry Data
Entry ID: A80841657 (Edited)
Written and Researched by:
MMF - Keeper of Mustelids, with added P.M.A. "Cry God for Harry, England and St. George"

Edited by:
Gnomon is an island
Date: 06   July   2011
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Referenced Guide Entries
Ginkgo Biloba
The Hippocratic Oath
The Conflict in Jammu and Kashmir
London, UK
Cambridgeshire, UK
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Overview
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: English Oak - Quercus robur
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Chestnut-leaved Oak - Quercus castaneifolia
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Holm Oak - Quercus ilex
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: The Lucombe Oak - Quercus x hispanica 'lucombeana'
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Turner's Oak - Quercus x turneri
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Indian Horse Chestnut - Aesculus indica 'Sidney Pearce'
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Sweet Chestnut - Castanea sativa
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Corsican Pine - Pinus nigra laricio
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: North American Tulip Tree - Liriodendron tulipifera
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Caucasian Elm - Zelkova carpinifolia
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: False Acacia - Robinia pseudoacacia
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Pagoda Tree - Styphnolobium japonicum
Kew Gardens' Important Trees: Stone Pine - Pinus pinea


Photograph by:
MazinMadFiddler


The shield of Science, Mathematics and Engineering faculty of the h2g2 University.
Kew Gardens' Important Trees
Overview | English Oak | Chestnut-leaved Oak | Holm Oak | The Lucombe Oak | Turner's Oak | Indian Horse Chestnut | Sweet Chestnut | Corsican Pine | Stone Pine | North American tulip tree | Caucasian Elm | False Acacia | Maidenhair Tree | Oriental Plane | Pagoda Tree



An Oriental Pine tree
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Angiosperms
Class: Eudicots
Order: Proteales
Family: Platanaceae
Genus: Platanus
Species: orientalis

This plant is an 'Old Lion' of Kew Gardens and was planted in the original Arboretum in 1762. It probably came from the Duke of Argyll estate at Whitton. It is adjacent to the east wall of the former White House whose outline can be seen on the lawn in front of Kew Palace1. As with many oriental plants bought to Kew, its hardiness was unknown and so it was planted close to the White House wall to protect it. Records indicate it is the only survivor of three trees planted in a row.

The species was probably introduced into England around 1560 although there is some speculation of it arriving earlier. A marvellous example recorded in Ely, Cambridgeshire, in 1674 may possibly bear this out. It has a number of claims in history, being linked to Hindu holy places in Kashmir, and also as the tree under which Hippocrates sat when teaching at Kos.

It is a large tree with broad leaves. The English name 'plane' is a corruption of the Latin 'platanus', which is related to the Greek word 'platys' meaning 'broad', describing the leaves. The 'oriental' part of the name stems from its range, being from Eastern Europe to India. It prefers moist areas, preferably close to rivers, although it can survive dry periods once it is well established.

Most Londoners are familiar with a similar type of tree: the London Plane, which is a hybrid of the Platanus orientalis and Platanus occidentalis. It is hard to distinguish from the Platanus orientalis.


1 This house was famously excavated in 72 hours by 'Time Team' in a Channel 4 television programme in the UK.

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