Cercis is a genus of about 10 species in the subfamily Cercidoideae of the pea family Fabaceae. They are characterised by simple, rounded to heart-shaped leaves and pinkish-red flowers borne in the early spring on bare leafless shoots, on both branches and trunk ("cauliflory"). The genus contains ten species, native to warm temperate regions of North America, southern Europe, western and central Asia, and China.

The generic name Cercis is derived from the Greek word κερκις (kerkis) meaning "weaver's shuttle", which was applied by Theophrastus to C. siliquastrum due to the resemblance of the dry seed pod to a loom shuttle.

Cercis species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including mouse moth and Automeris io (both recorded on eastern redbud). The bark of C. chinensis has been used in Chinese medicine as an antiseptic.

Cercis fossils have been found that date to the Eocene.

Species

Cercis comprises the following species:

{| class="wikitable"

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! Flowers!! Leaves !! Scientific name!! Common name !!Distribution

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|120px||120px ||Cercis canadensis <small>L.</small>|| eastern redbud ||eastern North America

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|120px||120px ||Cercis chinensis <small>Bunge</small>|| Chinese redbud || East Asia

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| ||120px ||Cercis chingii <small>Chun</small>||Ching's redbud ||China

|-

| || ||Cercis chuniana <small>F.P.Metcalf</small> || ||China

|-

|120px||120px ||Cercis glabra <small>Pamp.</small>||Yunnan redbud||China

|-

| center|120px||120px||Cercis griffithii <small>Boiss.</small>||Afghan redbud||southern central Asia

|-

|120px ||120px ||Cercis occidentalis <small>Torr. ex A. Gray</small>||western redbud ||Western United States

|-

| || ||Cercis orbiculata <small>Greene</small>|| intermountain redbud ||Arizona and Utah

|-

| ||120px ||Cercis racemosa <small>Oliv.</small>||chain-flowered redbud||western China

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|120px ||120px || Cercis siliquastrum <small>L.</small> || Judas tree or European redbud ||Mediterranean region

|-

|}

<!-- Cercis arizonica was reclassified as Cercis occidentalis. -->

<!-- Cercis likiangensis was reclassified as Cercis chuniana. -->

<!-- Cercis pauciflora was reclassified as Cercis chinensis. -->

<!-- Cercis hebecarpa is a subspecies of Cercis siliquastrum. (kew) -->

<!-- Cercis yunnanensis was reclassified as Cercis glabra. -->

right|thumb|The Judas tree (Cercis siliquastrum) often bears flowers directly on its trunk.

The Judas tree (Cercis siliquastrum) is 10–15&nbsp;m tall tree native to the south of Europe and southwest Asia. It is found in Iberia, southern France, Italy, Bulgaria, Greece, and Asia Minor, and forms a low tree with a flat spreading head. In early spring it is covered with a profusion of magenta flowers which appear before the leaves. The flowers are edible and are sometimes eaten in a mixed salad or made into fritters with a flavor described as an agreeably acidic bite. The tree was frequently figured in the 16th and 17th-century herbals. It is said to be the tree from which Judas Iscariot hanged himself after betraying Christ, but the name may also derive from "Judea's tree", after the region encompassing Israel and Palestine where the tree is commonplace.

A smaller Eastern American woodland understory tree, the eastern redbud, Cercis canadensis, is common from southernmost Canada to Piedmont, Alabama, and East Texas. It differs from C. siliquastrum in its pointed leaves and slightly smaller size (rarely over 12&nbsp;m tall). The flowers are also used in salads and for making pickled relish, while the inner bark of twigs gives a mustard-yellow dye. It is commonly grown as an ornamental.

The related western redbud, Cercis occidentalis, ranges from California east to Utah primarily in foothill regions. Its leaves are more rounded at the tip than the relatively heart-shaped leaves of the eastern redbud. The tree often forms multi-trunked colonies that are covered in bright pink flowers in early spring (February - March). White-flowered variants are in cultivation. It buds only once a year.

The species of Cercis in North America form a clade. Hopkins (1942) established a two-species system for North America which is still widely recognized. Alternatively, based on an exploratory morphometric analysis, Isely (1975)

inferred up to six separate entities (“phases”). Barneby (1989) recognized only one continental species and treated

all of western North American Cercis as C. canadensis var. orbiculata, but the justification was cursory and not definitive.

Morphometric studies of North American Cercis