KÖNIGIN VON DÄNEMARK – pink historic Alba rose - Booth
Imagine stepping onto your coastal veranda for afternoon tea, the air carrying a salty breeze while the richly perfumed blooms of KÖNIGIN VON DÄNEMARK drift through the garden. This historic Alba shrub rose, almost thornless, is easy to live with in a family setting and settles reliably even where winds are brisk and soil needs careful drainage. Its once-a-year summer flowering is a generous, curtain-like show of soft powder-pink rosettes that look wonderfully romantic in front of shingle, sea kale and grasses. Own-root plants build up slowly yet securely – roots in the first year, structure in the second, full ornamental value by year three – supporting a long, stable life in your border or a large 40–50 litre pot. The very strong, classic fragrance feels quietly luxurious after a day on the beach, while its recognised garden reliability and RHS Award of Garden Merit give you confidence that this venerable queen of Denmark will reward you season after season.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal family border, Cornwall/Devon |
A bushy, deep-rooting shrub that anchors well in exposed spots and copes with breezy, moisture-challenging weather, provided the soil offers reasonable drainage and you water in dry spells, suiting those wanting reliability by the sea for beginners. |
| Feature shrub by a veranda seating area |
The large, very full, pastel-pink rosettes make a single, impressive summer display that reads as a seasonal event, perfect beside a seating area where you can enjoy the spectacle up close for homeowners. |
| Fragrant “tea corner” planting |
With a very strong, garden-filling classic rose scent, this cultivar turns even a small seating nook into a perfumed retreat during its flowering weeks, ideal for those who value fragrance as much as flower colour for urbanites. |
| Low-maintenance historic hedge |
Medium maintenance with simple annual pruning and feeding keeps its bushy, upright habit tidy, creating an informal, traditional hedge that needs far less intricate care than modern exhibition roses for busy-owners. |
| Own-root long-term structural planting |
As an own-root shrub it regenerates well from the base, ages evenly without worrying about weak grafts, and maintains its shape for decades with basic care, which appeals to those planning a long-lived garden for families. |
| Large container or half-barrel (40–50 L+) |
In a generous 40–50 litre container with free-draining compost, it forms a stable, upright shrub with moderate watering needs, ideal for rented homes or hardstanding verandas where in-ground planting is limited for veranda-owners. |
| Partially shaded garden corner |
Suitable for partial shade, it still flowers and scents nicely where sun hours are shorter, such as east- or west-facing plots, letting you green up awkward boundaries that defeat more demanding varieties for shaded-gardeners. |
| Informal historic-style mixed bed |
The award-backed reliability and moderate disease tolerance mean it integrates well into traditional mixed borders with perennials, coping with ordinary British conditions where rain, wind and soil moisture need balanced management for coastal-lovers. |
Styling ideas
- Veranda-Tea Nook – place one shrub in a large clay pot by a sheltered chair, underplanted with sea thrift and festuca for a beachy feel – ideal for coastal veranda owners who want a fragrant pause-point.
- Romantic-Hedge – plant at hedge spacing along a garden boundary, mixing with sea kale and ornamental grasses to soften fences – for families seeking gentle privacy without a harsh, formal line.
- Historic-Showpiece – use as a solitary specimen in a gravel circle, accompanied by lavender and calamint to echo old walled gardens – for enthusiasts who enjoy a single, dramatic summer performance.
- Soft-Structure – combine with heuchera and low perennials in a mixed bed to give permanent height and scent while perennials change through the seasons – for beginners wanting easy structure with little replanting.
- Shade-Edge Glow – tuck into a lightly shaded side garden where buildings cast afternoon shade, pairing with ferns and pale flowers to highlight its powder-pink blooms – for urban gardeners making use of tricky side returns.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
KÖNIGIN VON DÄNEMARK, historic Alba shrub rose; commercial historic rose, exhibition historical shrub rose and fragrant cut flower; ARS exhibition name: Queen of Denmark; unregistered but long-established cultivar. |
| Origin and breeding |
Selected by James Booth & Sons Nursery, Flottbeck (then Denmark, now Hamburg), from seedlings of ‘Great Maiden’s Blush’ (R. × alba); bred c.1816, introduced in Germany in 1826, widely adopted across Europe. |
| Awards and recognition |
Holds the Royal Horticultural Society Award of Garden Merit (1993), indicating proven garden performance, stable characteristics, and reliability in typical UK growing conditions under ordinary, non-specialist care. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 120–180 cm high and 100–160 cm wide, with moderately dense, matt grey-green foliage, almost thornless stems, and a naturally rounded outline suited to hedging, specimen use and historic-style borders. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, rosette-shaped blooms with 40+ petals, large-sized at approximately 7–10 cm across, usually borne singly on stems; once-flowering in early summer, providing a concentrated, showy blooming period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pale powder-pink, slightly deeper towards the centre; buds softly pink with a green veil, opening mid-pink then fading to near white; colour lasts longer in cooler weather and lightens more rapidly in strong sunshine. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strongly scented with a classic old rose, full-bodied fragrance that readily fills the surrounding garden area in still weather; well-suited to seating areas and paths where the scent can be fully appreciated. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hip set is generally poor due to very double flowers; when produced, hips are small to medium, ovoid, 14–22 mm in diameter, and orange-red (RHS 40A), adding a discreet seasonal accent in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −29 to −32 °C (RHS H7; USDA 4b; Swedish Zone 5); moderate resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; tolerates average heat but needs watering during prolonged dry periods. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best as specimen, hedge, bed or park shrub; plant 80–160 cm apart depending on use; prefers well-drained soil and partial shade tolerance; medium maintenance with regular feeding, watering and simple annual pruning. |
KÖNIGIN VON DÄNEMARK offers a once-a-year cloud of richly scented, powder-pink bloom on a long-lived, own-root shrub that settles steadily into family or coastal gardens, making it a thoughtful choice for your next planting.