Wendlandia, as currently circumscribed, is a genus of Rubiaceae comprising about 90 species mainly in tropical and subtropical Asia. By sampling species from all four series (Clavigerae, Euexsertae, Montigenae, Subinclusae) and all tribes in the subfamily Dialypetalanthoideae, we examined the monophyly of Wendlandia based on phylogenetic reconstruction using the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer and four plastid DNA regions. Wendlandia was resolved as biphyletic, consisting of two distantly related lineages that correspond to the monotypic series Clavigerae (Wendlandia pendula), sister to the Chinese endemic genus Trailliaedoxa, and a clade containing the remainder sampled members of Wendlandia. Based on the isolated phylogenetic position of W. pendula and its unique morphological characteristics compared to the recognized tribes of the Vanguerieae alliance, we herein erect a new monotypic genus, Clavistigma, and a new tribe, Clavistigmeae to accommodate the unique species. The secondary pollen presentation and the unique seed morphology were firstly described for the species. The divergence time between Clavistigma and Trailliaedoxa was dated back to 13.8 mya, coinciding with the climate change in northwestern Yunnan driven by the uplift Tibet Plateau and the river incision in the Hengduan Mountains during the Miocene and Late Pliocene.