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mascula ssp. russoi is simply Paeonia corsica, reverchonii was given for plants colledted in Sardinia, Mt Limbardo.
I just used flora gallica and flora d'italia to compare description.Plants form Sardinia have long hairs under leaves not the case of corsican ones (Attachment Link) An interesting publication: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255966260_The_genus_Paeonia_L_in_Italy_Taxonomic_survey_and_revision
Paeonia obovata alba, my first of the season. It hasn't really increased since last year and I shall have to be more disciplined about removing some of the self-sown Nigella (love-in-a-mist) which are out-competing a lot of plants...
Sorry Yann, maybe I misunderstood you. It would be easier, at least for me, to speak and understand french but I think that very few other members would understand From you first post, I understood that it was simply P. corsica (which don't grow in Sardinia)I also just wanted to say that "you" can not simply apply a synonymy to a paeonia coming from a nursery with an old name and without knowing from which country it comes from, specially with a Paeonia of the mascula complex from mediterranean island. There has been so many names, so many descriptions, that it can't be simple .About hairs under leaves, from Flora gallica, both P. corsica and P. morisii have or don't have hairs under leave, this is not a caracter to differentiate these two species.Below, a table and a key from Camarda (2019) "Paeonia sandrae (Paeoniaceae) species nova of Sardinia and relationship with peonies of Corsica and Sicily" (because it can also be Paeonia sandrae if Steve's plant originally came from Sardinia !)