HERMANNIA, in botany; a genus of the pentandria order, belonging to the monodelphia class of plants.

Species. 1. The lavendulifolia, hath a shrubby stalk and slender branches, very bushy, about a foot and an half high, small, spear-shaped, obtuse and hairy leaves, with clusters of small yellow flowers along the sides of the branches, continuing from June to Autumn. 2. The altheifolia hath a shrubby stalk, and soft woolly branches, growing two feet high, with numerous yellow flowers in loose spikes growing at the end of the branches, and making their appearance in July. 3. The

grossularifolia hath a shrubby stalk and spreading branches, growing three or four feet high, with bright yellow flowers coming out in great numbers at the ends of all the shoots and branches in April or May. 4. The alnifolia hath a shrubby stalk and branches growing irregularly four or five feet high, with pale yellow flowers in short spikes from the sides and ends of the branches, appearing in April or May. 3. The hyssopifolia hath a shrubby upright stalk, branching out laterally six or seven feet high, with pale yellow flowers in clusters from the sides of the branches, appearing in May and June.

Culture. All these plants are natives of Africa, and therefore must be kept in a green-house during the winter in this country. They are propagated by cuttings of their young shoots, which may be planted in pots of rich earth any time from April to July.