FLASH SALES: 30% off selected Clematis until Tuesday night!

View more pictures

Hide images

Share your pictures? Hide split images
I have read and agree the terms and conditions of service.

Hepatica nobilis

Hepatica nobilis
Liverwort, Noble Liverwort, Liverleaf, Kidneywort, Pennywort

4,8/5
32 reviews
7 reviews
2 reviews
0 reviews
0 reviews

Delighted with this young plant that is already in bloom (2 lovely little flowers!). Thank you PdF for this little plant that makes up for last year's failure (a first young plant in a pitiful state due to a too long transportation and that didn't survive).

Chris, 12/03/2022

Leave a review → View all reviews →

Select delivery date,

and select date in basket

This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

More information

Graden Merit Value-for-money
A modest little undergrowth perennial, yet irreplaceable in rockeries or slightly shaded borders that it will enliven, very early in spring, with its royal-blue, round and luminous flowers surrounding a heart of white stamens. Its trilobed foliage, in a dark matte-green, evergreen in winter, renews itself after flowering, which lasts for nearly a month. Hardy and not demanding in well-drained soil, hepatica often self-seeds wherever it pleases.
Flower size
3 cm
Height at maturity
15 cm
Spread at maturity
15 cm
Exposure
Partial shade, Shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -29°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil
plantfit-full

Does this plant fit my garden?

Set up your Plantfit profile →

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time September to November
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Flowering time February to March
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D

Description

Hepatica Nobilis, also known as Liverwort or Noble Liverwort, is a small wild unergrowrth plant whose joyful royal-blue flowering often heralds the arrival of spring. Perennial but wandering, it likes to self-seed wherever it pleases: the plant for which you thought you had chosen the ideal spot can disappear for a reason that only it seems to know, and 'move' at its convenience into one of your flower pots or to an unexpected place in the garden, forming pretty cushions of olive-green trilobed leaves, decorative even in winter.

Hepatica nobilis is a perennial herbaceous plant of the Ranunculaceae family. It is present in almost all of Europe, as well as in Siberia and northern America. Generally found in mountainous areas, it thrives in woods, on limestone and well-drained soil. It is a very robust, hardy and undemanding plant.

Liverwort develops slowly from a short and fibrous stump, forming a cushion of about 15 cm (6 in) in all directions. This small fluffy plant produces rosettes of tough, petiolate leaves, divided into 3 rounded lobes, olive-green on the upper side, reddish-brown or purplish on the underside. The foliage generally persists in winter, but renews itself after flowering. Flowering takes place in March-April, earlier or later depending on the climate. Each flower, 2.5 cm (1 in) in diameter, carried by a petiole just above the foliage, is composed of 6 oval petals arranged in a star shape around a white stamen heart. Their colour varies from violet-blue to dark blue depending on the nature of the soil, illuminating slightly shaded areas.

Plant liverworts in groups of at least 6 to create a beautiful mass effect, in the undergrowth, in any slightly shaded areas, in rockeries or along paths or borders, but always in well-drained soil. They are charming when planted alongside early-flowering bulbs such as botanical crocuses, eranthis, narcissus or Iris reticulata, for example.

Properties:

Hepatica nobilis is also a medicinal plant. Its name of liverwort comes from the shape of its leaves, with 3 lobes, which can resemble that of the liver, just like the reddish-brown colour of their undersides which vaguely resembles that of this organ. According to the so-called "doctrine of signatures", which was authoritative in the Middle Ages, this small plant was reputed to cure the liver.

Hepatica nobilis in pictures

Hepatica nobilis (Flowering) Flowering
Hepatica nobilis (Foliage) Foliage
Hepatica nobilis (Plant habit) Plant habit

Flowering

Flower colour blue
Flowering time February to March
Inflorescence Solitary
Flower size 3 cm

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour dark green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 15 cm
Spread at maturity 15 cm
Growth rate slow

Botanical data

Genus

Hepatica

Species

nobilis

Family

Ranunculaceae

Other common names

Liverwort, Noble Liverwort, Liverleaf, Kidneywort, Pennywort

Origin

Central Europe

Planting and care

Very beautiful mountain undergrowth perennials, forming loose cushions and carpeting limestone and mossy rocks, in a very rich soil with plenty of humus, provided it is fresh or even quite dry in summer, but never wet. They are not easy to grow in heavy soils, to which a lot of leaf compost needs to be added. These perennials show a preference for slightly alkaline soils, but appreciate leaf compost. They will find a prime spot in a shaded and rather cool rockery, alongside Ramonda myconii, shade saxifrages, Mitella, and Heuchera, etc. These plants often self-seed wherever they please: the resulting plants will not necessarily show the same flower colour as their parent. Liverwort is not very susceptible to diseases and parasites.

Multiplication occurs by division in September-October. Plant at 25 cm (10 in) intervals. Avoid transplanting.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time September to November

Intended location

Suitable for Shaded rockery, Woodland edge
Type of use Edge of border, Container, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 5 per m2
Exposure Partial shade, Shade
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Chalky (poor, alkaline and well-drained), Silty-loamy (rich and light), Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Moist soil, humus-bearing, well-draining, light

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
4,8/5
No reviews
No reviews

Shade-loving perennials

Haven't found what you were looking for?