The Story Behind Our Rosa ‘Königin von Dänemark'
Wednesday, May 31, 2017
Rosa ‘Königin von Dänemark' - May 29 2017 scan from our garden |
Below you will find a shortened version of where some
roses came from, and how at long last I found which queen of Denmark is my Rosa ‘Königin
von Dänemark', who bred it, and how this lovely rose thrived by being
transplanted from our old Kerrisdale garden on Athlone Street into our little
Kitsilano deck garden.
In our large garden in Kerrisdale on Athlone Street I
amassed 85 roses beginning sometime at the end of the 80s. I had a preference
for storied old roses and David Austin English Roses because these roses have
intense fragrance.
Most old roses are not remontant which means they bloom
only once in early summer. In the 19th century a class of roses was
developed called Hybrid Perpetuals (not in the least perpetual!) that bloomed
once and then sparingly in the fall. It seems that roses coming from China had
the ability to be remontant. One of these remontant roses was not from China
but from the Middle East that history tells us may have come back to Europe
during the crusades. This rose was from a class called Damask and the rose that
bloomed more than once had the fanciful name of Rosa ‘Quatre Saisons’. I had that rose for a few years in the mid 90s until it simply died in a specially cold early spring.
In our Athlone garden I had increasing shade by big
conifers on a neighbour’s garden. Some of my roses began to look unhappy and a
few became diseased with botrytis cinerea.
The symptom was that the bloom would fall off before opening. The disease hit
four of my roses. Two were Albas which are hybrids whose antiquity may go back
further than the Roman Empire. Pliny, who lived from 23-79 A.D., mentioned
white roses in his Natural History. Botanists believe these roses may have been
Albas. These roses are usually white and their leaves are grayish. They almost
never get other well know afflictions like black spot.
Botrytis affecting Rosa 'Reine des Violettes' (purple) & Rosa 'Maiden's Blush', pink Scan from my garden |
My Albas were Rosa
‘Maiden’s Blush’ and Rosa ‘Königin
von Dänemark'. A third was Rosa
‘Belle Isis’ a Gallica which like all Gallicas are native to southern and central Europe. The
fourth was Rosa ‘Reine des Violettes’ a Hybrid Perpetual.
Rosa ‘Königin von Dänemark' July 17 2007 proliferated bloom but still beautiful |
The above scan shows a not too frequent rose malady called rose proliferation.
I tried spraying with copper sulphate and sulphur but nothing worked. Reine des Violettes died a few years ago and Belle Isis did not emerge with new growth this spring in our Kitsilano garden.
But, (yes but!) ‘Maiden’s Blush and ‘Königin von
Dänemark'’are both healthy. Maiden’s Blush as I write has yet to bloom but the
other is glorious. My only guess is that transplanting them to a different place
with different soil did the trick.
Alba Roses are hybrids whose antiquity may go back
further than the Roman Empire. Pliny, who lived from 23-79 A.D., mentioned
white roses in his Natural History. Botanists believe these roses may have been
Albas.
Rosa ‘Königin von Dänemark' - May 30 2017 scan from our garden |
From a website on Early Rose Breeding in Germany I found this:
The Englishman
James Booth was to emerge in a formerly part of Denmark but now in Germany with
a rose of ‘German origin’.
James Booth – a
landscape gardener from Scotland – was invited about 1795 by Baron von Vogt of – at that time – Denmark,
to create an ornamented farm, following the English example. Flottbeck, or as
it is written today ‘Flottbek’, now a suburb of Hamburg/Germany, had fallen to
Denmark by succession. Rich businessmen and ship owners, having their trade in
Hamburg built their estates and residences in Flottbek at that time. Several
others followed von Vogt’s example and more ornamented farms were built. To
meet the growing interests in trees and shrubs, tree nurseries were established
in the vicinity of these ornamented farms, where climatic and soil conditions
were optimal for nurseries. This, and the prospect to get a job there, led an
ex-sailor to move on with this family from Lower Saxony to this place. One of
the descendants of this ex-sailor should be the founder of one of today’s
leading rose nurseries worldwide: Wilhelm Kordes.
Alongside his
landscape gardening, which lasted for about 10 years, in 1798 Booth built up his own tree and shrub nursery
in Flottbek, where he finally started his rose breeding attempt.
The ‘Bleu Rougâtre
de Flottbeck’, described by Bosse as “bright red with violet fluorescence,” is
probably the only cultivar James Booth ever bred. He died in 1814 and was
succeeded by his sons.
In 1826 James Booth
Sons released the Alba ‚’Königin von Dänemark’, a seedling of the Alba ‘Maidens
Blush’ and an unknown rose. It would be their only release. This ‘Königin von
Dänemark’ sparked what was called “Der Rosenkrieg“ [‘rose war’] between James
Booth`s sons, [‘James Booth Söhne’] and Johann Georg Christian Lehmann, the
first director of the Botanical Institute in Hamburg and author of more than
half a dozen botanical books of scientific rank. Lehmann accused Booth Sons of
selling the known rose cultivar ‚La Belle Courtisane’ under a new name, and of
not having bred a new cultivar at all.[22] This “war” took place in the great
newspapers of that time, occupying most of the energy of the two opponents. In
the end, Prof. Lehmann could not prove his accusations, but the reputation of
both opponents had sustained major damage.
Booth Sons, very
successful as owners of the tree nursery, did not engage any more in rose
breeding. The nursery closed forever in 1886, liquidated by the next generation,
without having contributed any more to the rose world.
Here is the information of that Queen of Denmark Marie of Hess-Kassel! All of the roses featured in the scans here are not remontant. The argument
that some rosarians make (include me!) is that nobody expects cherry
trees or rhododendrons to bloom more than once. What these Albas, Hybrid
Perpetuals and Gallicas have in common is that all have outstanding
perfume. That’s why I love old roses.
Marie of Hesse-Kassel by Jens Juel - 1790 |