Table of Contents

Arum italicum

Arum italicum — Italian Arum / Italian Lords-and-Ladies

Arum italicum foliage emerging from woodland floor, March 2026

Photo: March 20, 2026 at 14:17 — glossy arrow-shaped (sagittate) leaves emerging from the woodland floor under the Monkey Puzzle tree. Ivy leaves also visible. The bold, polished foliage is characteristic of this species.

About

*Arum italicum* is a handsome tuberous perennial that thrives in exactly the conditions found in the Monkey Puzzle Strip — sheltered, part-shaded, and with humus-rich soil. It has an unusual growth cycle: the foliage emerges in autumn and persists through winter and spring before dying back in early summer. In late summer, vivid orange-red berries on bare stems make it highly ornamental. The subspecies *marmoratum* has attractive silver-marbled leaves.

Key Characteristics

Seasonal Calendar

Month What to expect
Autumn (Sep–Nov) New foliage emerges — the showiest period
Winter (Dec–Feb) Foliage persists; attractive through frost
Spring (Mar–May) Foliage at its boldest; flowers appear April–May
Early Summer (Jun) Foliage yellows and dies back
Late Summer (Aug–Sep) Vivid orange-red berries on bare stems — very ornamental

Care Notes

Aspect Details
Hardiness Hardy to −15°C (Zone 6)
Soil Humus-rich, moisture-retentive; tolerates heavy soil
Sun Part shade to full shade; ideal under deciduous or coniferous trees
Watering Little needed once established; benefits from moisture in autumn/winter
Maintenance Virtually none — cut back old flower stems after berries; divide tubers if clumps become congested
Spreading Self-seeds and spreads by offsets — can naturalise freely

Notes

See Also