When Holland Went Wild

April 7, 1998

Three hundred sixty years ago, "tulipmania" gripped the Netherlands. The flowers, which had first been brought to Europe from Turkey in the 1500s, became incredibly popular - and some became very expensive. People traded houses, farm animals, even whole estates to acquire a particular bulb.

The most sought-after bulbs were ones that exhibited a phenomenon called "breaking." "Breaking" is when white feathery streaks appear in the petals. What made the plants unusual is that seeds from an all-red tulip might suddenly produce bulbs with white streaks. "Offsets" from the bulb would be streaked, too.

Today, scientists know that "breaking" results from a virus that affects the pigment in a tulip's petals but not the health of the plant. From 1634 to 1637, though, the flowers were seen as valuable freaks of nature.

A single such bulb once sold for 36 bags of corn, 72 bags of rice, 4 head of cattle, 12 sheep, 8 pigs, 2 pounds of cheese, a silver cup - and the list goes on. One buyer was famously cheated. He paid the equivalent of about $400 for what he believed was a unique bulb. Then he noticed evidence that two little offset bulbs had already been detached from it: The bulb had had babies.

The government finally stepped in to regulate the tulip-bulb trade.

Some tulipmania tulips are still grown today. One, a scarlet-and-white tulip named Semper augustus, once sold for the equivalent of $5,200! Another, Zomerschoon, has flowers colored salmon-rose on cream.

And today you don't have to be a rash millionaire to buy one.