Gilliflower
{{for|the apple|Cornish Gilliflower}}{{Short description|English flower}}
{{Infobox
| title = Gilliflower or gillyflower
| image = 200px
| caption = From English botany, or coloured figures of British plants, ed. 3, vol. 1: t. 105 (1863)
}}
A gilliflower or gillyflower ({{IPAc-en|'|dʒ|ɪ|l|i|,|f|l|aʊ|.|ər}})Concise Oxford English Dictionary, OUP Oxford, 2011, p600 (Stephenson and Waite, Ed.s) is the carnation or a similar plant of the genus Dianthus, especially the Clove Pink Dianthus caryophyllus."Gillyflower". Encyclopedia Britannica, 26 Jun. 2008,
Gilliflowers were allegedly referenced as payment for peppercorn rent in medieval feudal-tenure contracts.Cuttino, G. P. “King’s Clerks and the Community of the Realm.” Speculum 29, no. 2 (1954): 395–409.
An old recipe for gilliflower wine is mentioned in the Cornish Recipes Ancient & Modern dated to 1753: "To 3 gallons water put 6lbs of the best powder sugar; boil together for the space of 1/2 an hour; keep skimming; let it stand to cool. Beet up 3 ounces of syrup of betony, with a large spoonful of ale yeast, put into liquor & brew it well; put a peck of gilliflowers free of stalks; let work fore 3 days covered with a cloth; strain & cask for 3-4 weeks, then bottle."{{Cite book |last=Marin |first=Edith |title=Cornish Recipes: Ancient & Modern |publisher=The Cornwall Federation of Women's Institutes |year=1965 |edition=22 |location=Cornwall, UK |pages=5}}
In popular culture
A rose and a gillyflower appear on the station badge of RAF Waterbeach in Cambridgeshire, and subsequently on the badge of 39 Engineer Regiment based at Waterbeach Barracks.
A rose and gillyflower were demanded by the owner of the land on which Waterbeach Abbey was built, in the 12th century.
Gilliflowers are mentioned by Mrs. Lovett in the song "Wait" from the Sondheim musical Sweeney Todd.{{Cite book |last=Wheeler |first=Hugh |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GVnVJBd5MEcC&q=gillyflowers |title=Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street |date=1991 |publisher=Hal Leonard Corporation |isbn=978-1-55783-066-1 |location=New York |pages=75 |language=en}}
They appear in the novel La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret (aka Abbe Mouret's Transgression or the Sin of the Father Mouret) by Émile Zola as part of the Les Rougon-Macquart series.{{Cite book |last=Zola |first=Émile |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VS6KEAAAQBAJ |title=La Faute de l'abbé Mouret |publisher=Culturea |year=2022 |isbn=978-2-38274-742-1 |location=Germany |pages=59, 83, 121, 270 |language=fr}}
Charles Ryder calls them gillyflowers, and they grow under his student window at Oxford in the novel Brideshead Revisited.{{Cite book |last=Waugh |first=Evelyn |title=Brideshead Revisited |publisher=Little Brown & Company: Back Bay Books |year=1944 |location=Boston |publication-date=1947 |pages=27}}
Shakespeare's Perdita is scathing about gilliflowers, or "streaked gillyvors" in Act IV, Sc 4 of his Winter's Tale, because they are cross-fertilized by humans, rather than by Nature: "I have heard it said/There is an art which in their piedness shares/With great creating Nature ... I'll not put/The dibble in earth to set one slip of them."
In the ballad Clerk Saunders, the ghost of Saunders tells May Margaret of the fate of those women who die in labour: "Their beds are made in the heavens high,/Down at the foot of our good Lord’s knee,/Weel set about wi’ gillyflowers;/I wot, sweet company for to see."
Gallery
File:Matthiola incana. Madeira, Portugal.jpg|Matthiola incana. Madeira, Portugal
File:Matthiola incana Vintage Lilac 3zz.jpg|"Vintage Lilac," Brookside Gardens, Maryland
File:Matthiola incana Vintage Burgundy 0zz.jpg|"Vintage Burgundy," Brookside Gardens, Maryland
File:Matthiola incana Harmony Light Rose 2zz.jpg|"Harmony Light Rose," Longwood Gardens, Pennsylvania
File:Hoary Stock (Matthiola incana) (3500419409).jpg|"Hoary stock," East Sussex, England
File:Matthiola Incana peach.jpg|"Peach stock"