EMINENCE – purple hybrid tea rose – Gaujard
With its rich purple blooms and sweetly spicy perfume, Eminence brings an immediate sense of romance to a small family garden, yet remains reassuringly straightforward to grow on its own roots for long-term stability and graceful recovery if the weather turns. The classic high-centred, exhibition-style flowers are ideal for cutting, so you can enjoy armfuls of bouquets indoors as well as a refined focal point outdoors, even in gardens exposed to coastal breezes and frequent rainfall. In a sunny border, this upright hybrid tea builds up steadily from its strong root system into a reliable source of repeat flowering with a plentiful second flush, provided you give it simple, occasional care such as deadheading. Over time, its moderate height and neat spread make it easy to place near paths, seating areas or a kitchen-garden corner for everyday pleasure. As an own-root plant it promises dependable longevity in a traditional cottage-style scheme, maturing into its full ornamental presence over several seasons without complicated pruning techniques.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near terrace or seating area |
The strong, far-scented, sweetly spicy fragrance is best appreciated close to where you sit with afternoon tea, so planting Eminence by a terrace or bench turns everyday moments into gently perfumed occasions for fragrance-lovers. |
| Cutting patch or kitchen-garden edge |
High-centred, exhibition-type flowers on upright stems make superb, long-stemmed cut blooms, so a small row in a sunny, well-prepared strip near the kitchen garden gives a steady supply of elegant vase material for home-florists. |
| Low, formal hybrid tea row in front garden |
The tidy, upright habit and moderate height allow Eminence to form a disciplined line along a drive or path when planted at recommended spacing, giving a classic, orderly look that still feels romantic for traditionalists. |
| Mixed cottage border with shrubs and perennials |
Repeat flowering with a plentiful second flush provides colour continuity among herbaceous plants, while the purple tones pair beautifully with silvers and soft pinks to create a storybook cottage border for colour-stylists. |
| Specimen rose in small lawn or gravel bed |
Planted singly at wider spacing, Eminence becomes a focal specimen, its velvety purple blooms drawing the eye without overwhelming a modest family garden, ideal where space is limited but impact is wanted for small-garden-owners. |
| Family garden with limited maintenance time |
Moderate disease resistance and own-root resilience mean only occasional plant protection and straightforward deadheading are needed to keep the plant healthy and flowering well, suiting those who prefer simple routines for busy-gardeners. |
| Border in exposed or breezy position |
The upright, moderately thorny framework anchors the plant securely, and its toughness copes well with typical British changeable weather including frequent rain and strong winds in open suburban plots for practical-owners. |
| Long-term planting in family home garden |
As an own-root hybrid tea, Eminence can regenerate from its base after hard pruning or winter damage, preserving its variety traits and offering many years of reliable flowering value for long-term-planners. |
Styling ideas
- Country-porch welcome – Line the path to your front door with Eminence underplanted with low Geranium x cantabrigiense for a soft, informal edge – ideal for lovers of relaxed English countryside entries.
- Kitchen-cutting corner – Group 3–5 bushes near the vegetable plot with Lychnis alpina ‘Magenta’ to echo the purple tones and provide continuous cutting material – perfect for home cooks who enjoy fresh table flowers.
- Evening-scent nook – Place a pair of Eminence roses beside a small seating area, backed by Lonicera nitida ‘Maigrün’ for evergreen structure – suited to those who unwind outdoors after work.
- Formal-purple ribbon – Create a single-colour ribbon along a straight path or driveway, combining Eminence with clipped box or low hedging for a refined, traditional front garden – for fans of orderly, classic design.
- Romantic feature bed – Plant Eminence as a central specimen in a round bed, surrounded by pale pink and white cottage perennials to highlight its velvety purple blooms – appealing to romantics who favour storybook garden scenes.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose Eminence; ARS exhibition name Eminence; registered in 1964 under US Plant Patent PP 2455, commercial type and group hybrid tea rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France in 1962 by Jean-Marie Gaujard, Roseraies Gaujard, from ‘Peace’ × (‘Viola’ × unknown seedling); introduced after 1964 via Jean-Marie Gaujard. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright bushes 75–105 cm tall, 50–70 cm spread, moderately thorny, with moderately dense, slightly glossy, light green foliage; deadheading required as self-cleaning is weak. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, high-centred exhibition blooms with 26–39 petals, classic pointed buds and mainly solitary flowers; remontant habit with a plentiful second flush in season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep lavender-purple petals, RHS 75A outer and 75C inner, silvery sheen inside; colour softens in strong sun, intensifies in cool weather, with greyish-pink tones as blooms age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Distinct, strong, far-scented fragrance of sweetly spicy rose character, best experienced near paths or seating; flowers are highly double and mainly ornamental rather than for pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set generally limited due to double flowers; where present, produces small red spherical hips around 10–14 mm in diameter, adding modest late-season decorative interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); good resistance to black spot and powdery mildew, moderate rust risk, needs regular watering in prolonged heat. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with good drainage; plant 60 cm apart in borders, 50 cm for hedges, 90 cm as specimens; medium maintenance, occasional spraying and routine deadheading recommended for best display. |
EMINENCE offers richly scented purple exhibition blooms, reliable repeat flowering and resilient own-root growth, making it a refined long-term choice for UK family gardens that you may confidently add to your planting plans.