Helleborus orientalis 'PRETTY ELLEN® PURPLE' Lenten rose, hellebore
Helleborus
The genus Helleborus comprises roughly twenty species of perennial plants distributed mainly across Europe and western Asia, especially in the mountainous and sub‑montane regions of the Balkans, the Alps and the Apennines. Direct fossil evidence is lacking, but genetic relationships and present‑day distribution point to a very ancient origin, probably reaching deep into the Tertiary. Hellebores were already known to classical physicians, as shown by the writings of Hippocrates and Pliny the Elder, who used them as drastic medicinal remedies. This is reflected in the Greek etymology of the name, most often interpreted as a combination of helein (to kill) and bora (a deadly food). It refers to the plant’s highly poisonous properties, valued in antiquity as powerful purgatives but easily fatal when used without expertise. The genus received its modern name and place in botany in the mid‑18th century thanks to Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778), who described it in 1753 in Species Plantarum. Hellebores are no novelty in Czech and Slovak gardens either; our grandmothers already enjoyed their flowers in winter and early spring. The only thing that has changed since then are the cultivars and colours, which are ever more numerous and increasingly beautiful. They are evergreen perennials with a remarkably structured flower. The “petals” we see at first glance, white or coloured, are in fact enlarged sepals surrounding a ring of true petals – the corolla segments, usually periwinkle green and occasionally red, which have become tubular and bear the nectaries.
Lenten rose is a south‑eastern European species whose natural range stretches from Greece across the Balkans to northern Turkey and the Caucasus, where it grows in semi‑shaded woodland, scrub and on humus‑rich, calcareous slopes. It was first described in 1789 by the French naturalist Jean‑Baptiste Lamarck (1744–1829), who chose the epithet “orientalis” to distinguish it clearly from the black hellebore (H. niger), another European species whose centre of distribution lies further west, from Switzerland and Germany to Slovenia and Croatia. The eastern hellebore is instead a plant of the Balkans and the Caucasus, forming variable populations with flowers in cream, pink, wine‑red and speckled shades. Its common name Lenten rose refers to the fact that it flowers during Lent, appearing in late winter and early spring when few other perennials are in bloom. Its high frost tolerance is striking and extremely valuable in cultivation: despite originating from regions with milder winters, it reliably withstands temperatures around –34 °C, and growers in Canada report survival down to –37 °C in sheltered sites. This combination of hardiness and natural colour variability made it the foundation of today’s garden hybrids known collectively as Helleborus × hybridus.
Pretty Ellen® Purple is a Lenten rose bearing single flowers of a deep maroon colour with a yellow-green centre and stamens whose pale cream shade contrasts strikingly with the dark petals. Depending on the weather, it flowers from February to April on upright stems reaching 30–35 cm in height. The flowers hang slightly in a bell-like manner. The plant flowers profusely and forms a compact clump of evergreen, palmately divided, dark green, leathery leaves. The Pretty Ellen® series is bred and selected from numerous seedlings by Ellen Akerboom at the Nachtvlinder AB nursery in the Netherlands.
Eastern hellebore likes heavy, evenly moist, neutral to alkaline, rich in humus soil in dappled shade or filtered sun and will take full shade, too. Fertilizing will increase flowering and help the leaves remain strong and nice throughout the winter. Grow it somewhere near your house entrance or close to the window you look out of frequently so that you can enjoy the plant when it starts flowering since at that time the weather outside is not yet ideal for walking around the garden. The flowers can cheer up a number of grey and gloomy days of late winter therefore thumbs up for hellebore! Harmful if eaten. It copes with harsh conditions and is hardy to at least -34 °C (USDA zone 4), some Canadians growers even confirm they grow them in zone 3 (to -37 °C).
Last update 06-03-2026
Goods are shipped all over Europe. For Russia and U.K. and for further details please read about SHIPPING OPTIONS HERE.
Are you interested in a serious discount for orders NOV-FEB? Check your options here.
THE PRICES INCLUDE VAT of 15%. For quick conversion you can use 1 CZK = approx. 0.04 EUR
- STANDARD QUALITY - Plants of this group are 1st class quality with number of branches and overall density adequate to their size and age, considering they were container grown.
- DE LUXE QUALITY - This label guarantees a luxurious quality of manually selected plants that, compared to their height and age, are exceptionally dense and beautiful.
- EXTRA - These plants are usually mature and bigger specimens with exceptional overall appearance.
- STANDARD (as described in the plant form) means a tree with a trunk of 190-210 cm and a crown at the top, unless specified differently. The commercial size for trees is their girth measured in the height of 1m from ground.
- HOBBY - These plants are of the same quality as our standard-quality plants but younger and therefore cheaper.
- SHRUB - a woody plant with branches growing bushy from the ground level.
- HALF-STANDARD or MINI-STANDARD - a small tree with shorter trunk, its size is usually specified.
- FEATHERED - These are trees with branches growing already from the base of the trunk and up along the stem.
- GRASSES and PERENNIALS - Sizes given usually read the diameter of the pot or the clump, as specified.


































.jpg)






