QUEEN OF BOURBONS – pink historical Bourbon rose - Mauget
With QUEEN OF BOURBONS you bring a touch of seaside elegance into a real family garden, combining a noble historic look with practical reliability for breezy patios and verandas where plants must cope with wind-borne salt and shifting coastal weather. This tall Bourbon rose forms a naturally upright, leafy screen, giving you a sheltered nook for morning tea or an afternoon pause after collecting shells, while its rich pink, cup-shaped flowers create a soft, romantic backdrop to everyday life. The strong, classic fragrance adds a sense of luxury without demanding fussy care: disease resistance is reassuringly high, and maintenance is kept pleasantly simple. As an own-root plant it is grown for long-term stability in your borders and large containers, quietly building roots in year one, extending confident new growth in year two and then reaching full ornamental value by year three for lasting coastal calm.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda windbreak |
The tall, upright habit and dense foliage make a natural living screen for blustery Cornish or Devon verandas, softening gusts and creating a cosier corner for seating in compact spaces, well suited to the needs of the busy coastal homeowner. |
| Small family garden focal point |
Planted as a single specimen, its historic form, semi-double pink blooms and strong scent provide a clear visual focus without clutter, giving structure and romance in one plant while leaving room for children’s play, ideal for time-pressed families. |
| Low-maintenance heritage hedge |
Once established, the combination of height, dense leafage and good disease resistance allows an informal, flowering hedge with minimal spraying or shaping, suiting those who prefer to enjoy their garden rather than work in it, especially relaxed beginners. |
| Coastal-style shingle bed |
Its robust root system and tolerance of exposed sites help anchor a shingle or gravel bed where watering is occasional, supporting a planting that copes well with breezy days and salt-laden air, particularly attractive to laid-back coastal gardeners. |
| Lightly shaded side return |
Partial shade tolerance means it can flower reliably in bright but not sun-drenched side passages, avoiding bare, gloomy strips beside the house and making use of awkward London or suburban spaces valued by urban residents. |
| Large container on sheltered terrace |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, it offers stature and historic charm where soil is limited, and own-root growth promotes long life with less repotting anxiety, which particularly benefits balcony and terrace-focused owners. |
| Clay soil border upgrade |
Given reasonable drainage, its strong framework and resilient constitution allow it to establish in typical British clay, offering long-term structure and colour where many plants struggle, a reassuring choice for cautious garden improvers. |
| Romantic seating nook by the house |
A pair of plants flanking a bench or path can define an intimate, fragrant corner, the lush foliage helping to buffer breezes and create a sense of enclosure in everyday weather conditions along exposed coasts, appealing to contemplative garden users. |
Styling ideas
- Shingle-Chic Screen – Place in a row along a coastal-style shingle strip with sea kale and blue Festuca to give height and shelter for deckchairs – ideal for seaside veranda lovers.
- Romantic Corner – Flank a small bench with two plants underplanted with Lavandula and pale Salvia nemorosa – for those who want a scented retreat without intensive pruning.
- Period-House Hedge – Create a loose, once-blooming hedge at 125 cm spacing, echoing historic properties while keeping care simple – for owners of traditional family homes.
- Container Statement – Grow a single plant in a 50 litre tub on a sheltered terrace with Helichrysum italicum for a soft pink and silvery foliage contrast – for balcony and patio gardeners.
- Clay-Border Anchor – Use as the tall backbone in a mixed clay border with Cornus alba ‘Spaethii’ and perennials for long-term structure – for gardeners improving challenging soil.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Bourbon group historic rose, current trade name QUEEN OF BOURBONS, commercial type historic Bourbon rose; unregistered cultivar used under established historic name in specialist collections and gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Old French Bourbon rose, bred by Mauget and introduced in 1834 from a ‘Rose Edouard’ seedling; initially distributed by Exotic Nursery, Australia, in 1851, origin otherwise historically undocumented. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous, upright shrub 150–260 cm tall and 110–200 cm wide, with dense, dark green slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a substantial, leafy framework suitable for screening and hedging. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms with 13–25 petals, medium size on clustered inflorescences; once-flowering in summer rather than repeat-blooming, offering a concentrated main display typical of historic Bourbons. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Mid-pink flowers with a slight mauve undertone; buds deep pink, opening to strong pink outer petals and paler veined centres, gradually lightening so edges become almost cream before petals finally fall. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, full-bodied classic rose scent characteristic of Bourbon heritage types; the rich perfume is easily noticeable around the plant in still air, contributing significantly to its ornamental and nostalgic appeal. |
| Hip characteristics |
Generally low hip production; where formed, hips are pear-shaped, 15–25 mm, orange-red RHS 40A, adding a modest late-season accent without overwhelming the plant’s overall historic rose character in the border. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (USDA 5b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 4); resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust under normal conditions, with moderate tolerance of heat and only moderate drought endurance. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to specimens, hedges, beds and park plantings; spacing 125–210 cm depending on use, mass planting around 0.5 plants/m²; prefers well-drained soil, copes with partial shade, generally low maintenance once established. |
QUEEN OF BOURBONS offers tall, leafy screening, a single spectacular season of fragrant historic bloom and long-lived own-root reliability; a thoughtful option if you would like a quietly enduring coastal rose.