The blue passion flower is a woody vine capable of growing up to 25 m
high where support is available. Leaves are alternate, palmately 5-lobed
(sometimes 3-9 lobed), and are up to 10 cm in length while being
linear-oblong shaped. The base of each leaf has a twining
tendril 5-10 cm long, which twines around supporting vegetation to hold
the plant up. The flower is complex, about 10 cm across, with the five
sepals and petals similar in appearance, whitish in colour, surmounted
by a corona of blue or violet filaments, then five greenish-yellow
stamens and three purple stigmas.
The unusual shape of the flowers has led to the plant being associated in
Christian symbolism with the passion of Jesus; the three stigmas
representing the three nails used to nail Jesus to the cross, the ovary and
its stalk represent the chalice of the Last Supper, the five anthers
represent the five wounds, the corona represents the crown of thorns, the
ten 'petals' the apostles (save Judas the traitor and Peter the denyer);
the old leaves also represent the hands of those who persecuted him, the
young leaves the point of the lance used to stab him, and the tendrils the
whips of those who beat him.
Blue Passion Flower is native to southern Brazil and Argentina, widely
cultivated world over.
Identification credit: Tabish
Photographed in cultivation in Nainital.
• Is this flower misidentified?
If yes,
Your name: Your email: Your comments
The flower labeled Blue Passion Flower is ...