Hubertus Faber-Castell

Hubertus Alexander Wolfgang Rüdiger Emanuel Wilhelm Count von Faber-Castell (8 April 1934 – 29 January 2007) was a German billionaire and industrial heir.[1]

Hubertus Faber-Castell
Born
Hubertus Alexander Wolfgang Rüdiger Emanuel Wilhelm Count von Faber-Castell

8 April 1934
DiedJanuary 29, 2007
NationalityGerman
OccupationBillionaire and industrial heir
Spouse(s)2
Children3

Family

Hubertus Count von Faber-Castell was son to two German dynasties.[2] His father, Roland Count von Faber-Castell, was sole owner of today's Faber-Castell AG. On his maternal side, Alix-May von Frankenberg and Ludwigsdorf, belonged to the owning family of Europe's biggest private bank Sal. Oppenheim Jr. & Cie. Count Hubertus briefly worked in both family businesses. After a dispute with his father, he left the Faber-Castell family holdings and sold most of his stake in the company to his younger brother. From there on, the Franconian stationery manufacturer was managed by his younger brother Anton-Wolfgang Count von Faber-Castell. Count Hubertus was silent owner at the Faber-Castell Company, as well as the bank Sal. Oppenheim. The combined stakes in the two corporations, made him a billionaire. Hubertus had three children from two different marriages. Patrick Count von Faber-Castell, husband of the German actress Mariella Ahrens, and German-Swiss Caroline Countess von Faber-Castell-Gotzens from his first marriage. The Count's third child, Floria-Franziska Princess von Hessen, is married to the Head of the House of Hesse, Donatus.[3]

China

Faber-Castell moved to Asia, where he pioneered the set up of commercial television in China. When finalised, Count Hubertus sold his 50 percent stake to the Chinese Government for an undisclosed sum. Count Hubertus was publicly titled by the government as 'great friend of China', later the Count was honored to be the first European honorary citizen of the city of Beijing.[4]

gollark: The best way to, you know, stop people starving and all would probably be to... reconcile with other countries, be less authoritarian, and accept aid.
gollark: They probably could do better.
gollark: I kind of expect Google to end up controlling a drone army or something eventually.
gollark: You can totally compare it! We're making comparisons now!
gollark: Elections: people are broadly unsatisfied with the results somehowFreedom of citizens: constitution is blatantly ignored half the timeRight to bear arms: kind of decreasing over timeRight to free speech: in practice, probably notRight to assemble: right now, you don't have that, which I feel is justified, but stillRight to privacy: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAAGHASHFHASGFAHsf

See also

References

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