Sunday, August 5, 2012

Why the Rose is For Romance

The rose is a romantic symbol from before the time of ancient Greece. The Iliad mentions that the body of Hector was anointed with rose oil Aphrodite / Aphrodite is also known as Venus is the goddess of love. Even its origin from the rose. She is believed to have come to life in the way of the sea, where it fell to the ground with beautiful white roses grew. These myths tell of how when she was scratched by the thorns of the roses as she helped her lover, it fell on the rose plants and flowers from white to red.
Other Greeks, who wrote about roses Epicurus, who had his own rose garden where the roses were used to make perfumes and wreaths. Whether he was oil used in cooking or not, it is a feature of many food cultures, including Iran, much of the Arab world and India. It is a byproduct of making rose oil.

Roses were used as symbols in the United Kingdom. Yorkshire and Lancashire are represented by different colors of roses and there is fierce rivalry between the provinces. The red rose represents the House of Lancaster and the white rose of York House. This goes back to about the fourteenth century and is said to be a religious symbol referring to the Virgin Mary, who was often called the Mystical Rose of Heaven. The War of the Roses was ended by Henry VII, who created the Tudor Rose as a symbol combining the two.

Roses are given on Valentine's Day as a sign of love. Traditionally, the appropriate number or give a single rose or twelve. Roses are not likely to grow in your garden in the UK in February and many will be imported from countries like Spain, the Channel Islands, South America or Africa where many of the British flowers come from. Red roses are traditional, but there is nothing to stop giving your other colors if you know what they want.

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