
Good morning from a cool Hastings day.
This week JEN H. from The Daily Post has asked us for symbols. So what else can I show, except my favourite flowers – Roses. I just love their smell and the many varied colours. I can’t grow them, but we do have a public rose garden for me to get my fix.

There are so many different websites with different meanings for the different colours. These meanings come from:
http://www.proflowers.com/blog/rose-colors-and-meanings

Roses have been long used as symbols in a number of societies. Roses are ancient symbols of love and beauty. “Rose” means pink or red in a variety of languages (such as the Romance languages and Greek).

The rose was sacred to a number of goddesses including Isis, whose rose appears in the late classical allegorical novel The Golden Ass as “the sweet Rose of reason and virtue” that saves the hero from his bewitched life in the form of a donkey.[1] The ancientGreeks and Romans identified the rose with the goddess of love, Aphrodite (Greek name) and Venus (Roman name).
In Rome a wild rose would be placed on the door of a room where secret or confidential matters were discussed. The phrase sub rosa, or “under the rose”, means to keep a secret — derived from this ancient Roman practice.

Islam and Sufism
The cultivation of geometrical gardens, in which the rose has often held pride of place, has a long history in Iran and surrounding lands.[2][3] In the lyric ghazal, it is the beauty of the rose that provokes the longing song of the nightingale[4] – an image prominent, for example, in the poems of Hafez.[5]
In turn, the imagery of lover and beloved became a type of the Sufi mystic’s quest for divine love, so that Ibn Arabi, for example, aligns the rose with the beloved’s blushing cheek on the one hand and, on the other, with the divine names and attributes.[6]
Other well-known examples of rose symbolism in Sufism include;
- The Sufi master Jilani is known as “the Rose of Baghdad” and his order, the Qadiriyya, uses the rose as its symbol.
- Two prominent books aligned with Sufism are The Rose Garden by Saadi and Mahmud Shabistari‘s The Rose Garden of Secrets.
The rose is the emblem of Islamabad Capital Territory in Pakistan
In Christianity
Medieval Christians identified the five petals of the rose with the five wounds of Christ. Roses also later came to be associated with the Virgin Mary. The red rose was eventually adopted as a symbol of the blood of the Christianmartyrs. A bouquet of red roses, often used to show love, is used as a Valentine’s Day gift in many countries. On St George’s Day in Catalonia people offer dark red roses as gifts, especially between lovers. The Virolai, a hymnto the Virgin of Montserrat, one of the black Madonnas of Europe, begins with the words: “Rosa d’abril, Morena de la serra…” (April rose, dusky lady of the mountain chain…). Therefore this virgin is sometimes known as “Rosa d’abril”. The red rose is thus widely accepted as an unofficial symbol of Catalonia.[7]
Roses are occasionally the basis of design for rose windows comprising five or ten segments (the five petals and five sepals of a rose) or multiples thereof, though most Gothic rose windows are much more elaborate.
The Rose of England

The Tudor rose.
The rose is the national flower of England.[8] The usage dates from the reign of Henry VII who introduced the Tudor rose, combining a red rose, representing the House of Lancaster, and a white rose, representing the House of York, as a symbol of unity after the English civil wars of the 15th century which, long after, came to be called the Wars of the Roses. The rose thus appears in the histories of William Shakespeare and in the Child Ballads. It has been the symbol of England Rugby, and of the Rugby Football Union, since 1871.[8]
In North America
Rose-picking in the Rose Valleynear the town of Kazanlak in Bulgaria, 1870s; engraving by Austro-Hungariantraveller Felix Philipp Kanitz
In 1986 it was named the floral emblem of the United States,[9] and it is the provincial flower of Alberta (the wild rose) in Canada. It is the state flower of four US states: Iowa and North Dakota (R. arkansana), Georgia (R. laevigata), and New York[10] (Rosa generally). Portland, Oregon counts “City of Roses” among its nicknames, and holds an annual Rose Festival, as does Pasadena, California, holding the Tournament of Roses Parade since 1890 in conjunction with the Rose Bowl since 1902. In April 2011, the United States government space program agency National Aeronautics and Space Administration celebrated the Hubble Space Telescope‘s 21st anniversary by releasing an image of spiral galaxies positioned in a rose-like shape.[11]
Socialism
A red rose (often held in a hand) is a symbol of socialism or, more notably, social democracy: it is used as a symbol by German, British, Irish, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Brazilian,Dutch, Bulgarian, Korean, and other European labour, socialist or social democratic parties, mostly adopted in the period after World War II.[12]
In the world today
The rose is used as a symbol of love and compassion in many countries (e.g. USA, England, Spain, France, Italy). The meaning ascribed to the rose depends on context; general examples include the romantic love of roses given on Valentine’s Day, as part of courtship or for an anniversary; filial love in the case of mother’s day; compassion in the case of a funeral.
Ok, I cheated and went to Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_(symbolism). But roses do have such a fascinating history, I couldn’t resist.
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/symbol/
https://piecesofstarlight.wordpress.com/2015/07/10/wpc-symbols-of-blessing/
https://sustainabilitea.wordpress.com/2015/07/10/weekly-photo-challenge-symbol-of-perfect-beauty/
http://steve-says.net/2015/07/10/fridayfoto-wine-sun-sea/
http://ceenphotography.com/2015/07/10/the-daily-post-weekly-photo-challenge-symbol-the-five-senses/
http://moondustwriter.com/2015/07/10/joined-by-a-bridge-photography/
https://tomwarrenphoto.wordpress.com/2015/07/10/bonnie-me/
Thanks so much for visiting.
I can’t think of any flower — except maybe the lily — that has as rich a symbolic life as the rose. You could write several volume about it. And your pictures are wonderful. I’m convinced they smell like roses. Really. I think they have triggered some kind of sense memory 🙂
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Thanks so much Marilyn. It is a heavenly place for me – the smells are just beautiful.
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You always include such fascinating information with your images, which ar stunning. Thanks, Raewyn, for a wonderful entry for this week’s challenge, even if you didn’t actually like to it. 😉
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I meant link to it, not like to it. Ah, the dangers of typing on a mobile device.
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Lol
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No worries. I have always been fascinated with the symbolism of all flowers. Just have a lot of rose photos
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I love your piece on roses! Hope you don’t mind if I reblog this on one of my sites!
All My Best,
Jill
Aka 1MorganLeFaye
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Thank you so much. I don’t mind at all.
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Reblogged this on Arthurian Romances.
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Roses through time always had a lot of symbolism. Long ago and still a favorite. Love your rose images.
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Wow, what great photos and beautiful roses! 🙂
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Thanks so much Natalie
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Gorgeous roses! And a most interesting post regarding the symbolism of this flower
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Thanks so much
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Beautiful roses and I loved the interesting info!
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Thanks Aletta
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Wow wow wow I love the orange one! ❤ Beautiful
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Thanks so much MichelleMarie. I just love Roses.
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Meeee tooooo! Very much! 😀
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