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Floral organogenesis and development of the bushy perennial legume Astragalus caspicus were studied using epi-illumination light microscopy techniques. Based on our observations, flowers are in axillary two-flowered racemes, initiate all 21 floral organs and show precocious appearance of zygomorphy. The order of floral organ initiation is unidirectional in whorls starting from the abaxial position of the flower with a high degree of overlap. Another important ontogenetic feature is the existence of two successive common primordial stages categorized as primary and secondary. The primary common primordia produce antesepalous stamens and secondary common primordia. In contrast, the five secondary common primordia subdivide into a petal and an antepetalous stamen primordia. Our findings on floral ontogeny of A. caspicus provide new evidence for the complex and variable floral initiation and development in legumes. The floral apex with strong overlapping initiation of different organs illustrates a paradox in which different capabilities must be presumed to exist simultaneously. Moreover, two extraordinary types of common primordia represent possibly an advanced evolutionary trend where time intervals between the initiations of different floral organs in Papilionoideae are shortened.