The chemical composition of hydrodistilled essential oils obtained from aerial parts and roots of selected Caryopteris ('bluebeard') species (C. incana, C. mongolica, Caryopteris 9 clandonensis), as well as the newly established in vitro shoot and adventitious root cultures of the above plants, was analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Essential oil content and composition differed significantly depending on the type of plant material analyzed. Adventitious roots were characterized by the highest essential oil yield, reaching 1.8 % V/DW in Caryopteris 9 clandonensis. Limonene and cedrol were the main components of the essential oil derived from aerial parts of the intact plants (11.9-16.0 and 10.7-10.9 %, respectively), whereas the volatile fractions of the in vivo roots of all species contained large amounts of 3,5-bis(1,1-dimethyl)-phenol (12.9-26.2 %). 1,8-cineole, absent in the intact plant materials, was the dominating volatile constituent of the essential oils obtained from in vitro shoots (24.8-34.2 %). The volatile oil derived from adventitious root cultures consisted primarily of 1-octen-3-ol (19.7-31.5 %) and medicinally relevant diterpenoids: abietatriene and trans-totarol, which were accumulated in considerable quantities, especially in the adventitious roots of C. clandonensis (21.6 and 29.2 %, respectively).