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Lily of the valley

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Convallaria majalis
Convallaria majalis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Division:
Class:
Order:
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Genus:
Convallaria
Species:
C. majalis
Binomial name
Convallaria majalis

Convallaria majalis, commonly known as the Lily of the Valley or Prolificans Lily-of-the-Valley, is one of two members of the genus Convallaria in the flowering plant family Ruscaceae. It is a woodland plant that is native throughout the cool temperate Northern Hemisphere in Asia and Europe. It is a herbaceous perennial plant that forms extensive colonies by spreading underground stems called rhizomes. These send up numerous stems each spring. The stems grow to 15-30 cm tall, with two leaves 10-25 cm long, and a raceme of 5-15 flowers on the stem apex. The flowers are white (rarely pink), bell-shaped, 5-10 mm diameter, and sweetly scented; flowering is in late spring, in mild winters in early March. The fruit is a small red berry 5-7 mm diameter.

It is a popular garden plant, grown for the scented flowers.

The leaves and flowers contain cardiac glycosides that have been used in medicine for centuries. In overdose, preparations can be poisonous; pets and children can be harmed by eating Lily of the Valley.

Lily of the Valley is used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Grey Chi.

19th century illustration

The flower is also known as Our Lady's tears since, according to legend, the tears Mary shed at the cross turned to Lilies of the Valley. According to another legend, Lilies of the Valley also sprang from the blood of St. Leonard during his battle with the dragon. Other names include May Lily, May Bells, Lily Constancy, Ladder-to-Heaven, Male Lily and Muguet.

By tradition, Lily of the Valley is sold in France in the streets on May 1. Since 1982, Lily of the Valley is the national flower of Finland. The Norwegian municipality Lunner has a Lily of the Valley in its coat-of-arms. It is the official flower of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, Kappa Sigma fraternity, Delta Omicron fraternity, Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority, and Alpha Phi sorority.

The name "Lily of the Valley" is also used in some English translations of the Bible in Song of Songs 2:1, although whether the Hebrew word "shoshana" originally used there refers to this species or not is uncertain. The meaning of this flower is "You will find Happiness."

Convallaria close-up