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Arthur - superb pictures, it is similar to Iris barnumae f. protonyma from Iran, do you know which differences exist? Checking Kew Checklist I was surprised to see Iris polakii is a synonym of Iris sanguinea var. sanguinea (http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/namedetail.do?name_id=322241) - thinking always to be "species" near to Iris barnumae...
Seed of this plant was distributed by Jim & Jenny Archibald and it appeared in their seed list as JJA584.750 : IRIS BARNUMAE f. PROTONYMA (Sect. Oncocyclus) Iran, West Azerbayejan, N of Khoi, Khamsian pass. 1585m. Residual steppe between cultivated areas. (Possibly the first time material of this sumptuous, dwarf steppe-plant has been available since the 1960's. Beautifully proportioned flowers in pure, penetrating, rich red-violet. The standards are slightly paler than the falls with their glossy, black-violet signal-patches below distinctive beards of dense, short, black hairs, like patches of moleskin. The black-bearded race is endemic to NW Iran and this colony has the finest forms we have seen.)I was lucky enough to buy a small plant from Jenny Archibald after Jim's death and on the back of the label Jim has written "= I polakii"
JanisIt is quite clear that your plant is barnumae, and the plants I photographed in Iran are different.I believe the discussion on 'moleskin' is still continuing - the black patch on the falls suggests Iris polakii is involved.
I tend to agree with you Janis. I have not seen them in nature but the pictures of the 'moleskin' Iris show very uniform plants (only colour seems to vary), I always wondered when I saw them also mentioned as 'Meda'hybrids. I had received 2 plants from Jenny Archibald, hope they will flower this year for the first time - I think they were labled Iris aff. barnumae - Moleskin.