Eminence – purple hybrid tea rose
With its richly coloured blooms and strong sweetly spicy scent, Eminence brings classic hybrid tea elegance to compact British gardens while coping well with breezier sites and careful moisture management. This upright, medium-height bush suits borders and specimen planting where you want defined structure, reliable repeat flowering and long, straight stems for cutting. The deep lavender-purple petals with a subtle pink undertone create a velvety focus against lighter planting schemes, giving your front or cottage-style garden a quietly distinctive character. As an own-root plant, Eminence builds a durable, regenerating root system that supports long-term longevity and stable shape in typical UK soils. In its first years it concentrates on roots, then shoots, then by the third season shows its full display, rewarding patient gardeners who prefer enduring value over instant-but-short-lived impact.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The upright habit and medium height allow Eminence to stand neatly beside a path or entrance without overpowering the space, while the velvety purple blooms read clearly from the street, suiting design-conscious homeowners. |
| Small border or bed in a family garden |
Planting 1–3 bushes at recommended spacing gives a tidy, easy-to-manage structure in modest borders, with repeat flowering delivering colour through the season for families who want impact from limited planting space, especially beginners. |
| Cutting and exhibition corner |
High-centred, pointed buds on straight stems are ideal for cutting and show, so a small row or cluster can supply vases without spoiling the garden picture, appealing to those who enjoy arranging flowers at home, particularly enthusiasts. |
| Classic cottage-style mix |
The refined purple tone pairs well with softer perennials such as cranesbills and alpine catchfly, giving a romantic cottage look while the clear structure of a hybrid tea keeps the composition from becoming unruly for style-focused gardeners. |
| Specimen in a large container |
Eminence can be grown as a single specimen in a substantial container (at least 40–50 litres), where its defined form and scented blooms offer terrace or patio interest for busy people who prefer contained, manageable planting, especially urban owners. |
| Structured rose border |
Planted at spacing suited to linear beds or low hedging, the uniform upright growth creates rhythm and repetition, giving a disciplined, formal edge to paths or lawns that appeals to householders looking for orderly, low-fuss borders. |
| Long-term feature planting |
As an own-root rose, Eminence develops a durable framework that can recover from harder pruning or weather setbacks over the years, suiting homeowners who want roses that settle in and endure with modest care, ideal for time-pressed families. |
| Wind-exposed but decorative spots |
The moderately dense foliage and medium height help the plant cope in more open positions if the soil is well prepared, offering reliable ornamental value even where gardens face regular breezes, reassuring cautious new gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Harmony – Combine Eminence with Geranium x cantabrigiense and soft grasses for a relaxed, romantic edge to paths – ideal for lovers of informal cottage gardens.
- Front-Door Focus – Place one bush by the entrance, underplanted with low evergreen Lonicera nitida ‘Maigrün’, to frame the doorway – suited to homeowners wanting a welcoming first impression.
- Cutting Row – Plant a short row at 60 cm spacing in a sunny side bed to provide regular, scented stems for indoor vases – perfect for those who enjoy arranging their own flowers.
- Patio Statement – Grow a single plant in a 40–50 litre pot with neutral-toned containers to highlight the purple blooms – appealing to balcony and terrace gardeners with limited ground space.
- Structured Border – Alternate Eminence with pale flowering perennials to create rhythm and contrast along a lawn edge – a good choice for neat, design-led family gardens.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose ‘Eminence’, ARS exhibition name Eminence; registered 1964 (US Plant Patent PP 2455), current trade name Eminence Hybrid tea rose Eminence. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Jean-Marie Gaujard, Roseraies Gaujard, Loire, France; cross of ‘Peace’ × (‘Viola’ × unknown seedling); breeding year 1962, introduced commercially after 1964. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, around 75–105 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, moderately dense, light green, slightly glossy foliage, moderately thorny stems, weak self-cleaning so benefits from regular deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, 26–39 petal, high-centred, pointed hybrid tea blooms, typically solitary on stems; remontant with a plentiful second flush, ideal for cutting and exhibition-type uses. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep lavender-purple with subtle pink undertone; RHS 75A outer, 75C inner; newly opened flowers rich and velvety, slightly paler in strong sun, more vivid in cool weather, with soft greyish-pink tones before fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, far-scented fragrance with a sweetly spicy rose character; primarily ornamental rather than pollinator-focused due to very double blooms that limit access to nectar and pollen. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set usually modest because of double flowers; where formed, small red spherical hips around 10–14 mm in diameter can add discrete seasonal interest after flowering. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate overall disease resistance, generally resistant to powdery mildew and black spot, more prone to rust; hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3) with normal UK conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny, well-drained soil with regular watering in dry spells; medium maintenance, with occasional plant protection and deadheading; plant at 50–90 cm depending on use for borders, hedging or specimen display. |
Eminence offers velvety purple blooms, strong fragrance and neat structure on a durable own-root plant, making it a refined, long-lived choice for gardeners seeking dependable colour and form; consider it where you value lasting, scented presence.