Tinnea rhodesiana, commonly called the brown sunbell, is a species of flowering plant in the family Lamiaceae. It is found across much of southern Africa.
This species is a twiggy, soft shrub growing about tall. The branches are pale brown and finely hairy when young, often becoming smoother with age. The leaves are borne on short stalks and are somewhat leathery, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, usually long (occasionally to ), darker above and paler beneath, with small glandular dots on the lower surface and smooth margins.
The flowers are produced in a loose inflorescence long at the tips of branches and short side shoots, usually one or two per whorl. The calyx enlarges in fruit to form an inflated, straw-coloured, ovoid structure long. The corolla is chocolate-brown to purplish, violet-scented, and long, with a broad, three-lobed lower lip. The fruit consists of nutlets long, each with a broadly elliptical wing about .
Tinnea rhodesiana can be distinguished from Tinnea galpinii by its taller, more upright, and more twiggy habitand its flowers are typically produced singly on short lateral shoots rather than in terminal clusters. It can be separated from Tinnea aethiopica by its pubescent nutlets and the smooth, cylindrical nature of its branches.
Tinnea rhodesiana grows on stony hillsides in dry, open woodland in Angola, Zambia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, northern Namibia, and South Africaâ²s Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces.
The species epithet means â³of Rhodesiaâ³, a colonial name for a region covering modern Zimbabwe and, at times, Zambia.