Peter Pierre Tutein

Peter Pierre Tutein (11 October 1726 – 7 December 1799) was a German-Danish merchant and industrialist. He established a thriving trading house in Copenhagen in 1747, trading on the Danish colonies with his own fleet of merchant ships. He ran the company from his home at Købmagergade 13. His son Friederich Tutein continued the company under the name Fr. Tutein & Co. after his father's death.

Friederich Tutein
Born(1726-10-11)11 October 1726
Died7 December 1799(1799-12-07) (aged 73)
Copenhagen, Denmark
NationalityDanish
OccupationMerchant and industrialist

Early life and education

Tutein was born in Mannheim, the son of Pierre Tutein and Elisabeth Henri. He apprenticed as a merchant in Landau.[1]

Career

Tutein moved to Copenhagen in 1748. He managed Peter De Windtz' trading house after Windtz' death. In 1756 he established his own trading house. It soon developed into one of the most successful in the city. He traded on the Danish colonies with his own ships and had close ties to the Danish Asiatic Company. A few of his ships participated in the Triangular trade.

He mainly traded colonial goods such as coffee and sugar. He was one of the largest importers of coffee to Denmark of his time. He had close ties to Danish Asiatic Company.

Tutein was also involved in a number of enterprises. He became the owner of a stockings factory through his marriage. He also became a partner in Reinhard Iselin's kattun factory in Klampenborg. The factory was moved to Østerbro in 1766. In 1779, Tutein was granted a license to establish a silk ribbon factory on Blågård in Nørrebro but gave up the plans and sold the property to the government later that same year.

Tutein was a member of Grosserersocietetet from 1769. By the late 1780s, his company had grown to become the third largest trading house in Copenhagen, surpassed only by those of Niels Ryberg and Frédéric de Coninck.

Personal life

Tutein married Pauline Marie Rath on 12 May 1756 in St. Peter's Church. She had previously been married to Jacob Ernst Bruckner but he had died the previous year.

Tutein owned the country house Sneglebakken in Lyngby from 1783 . He died on 7 December 1799 and was buried in Assistens Cemetery but his remains have later been moved to Hvedstrup Church.

Tutein left one son and three surviving daughters (two daughters died as infants). The son, Friederich Tutein, continued the family's trading house under the name Fr. Tutein & Co. after his father's death. Yutein's eldest daughter, Pauline Louise Tutein (8 March 1761 - 4 December 1827), married Peter Tutein (22 November 1752 - 11 January 1828). Another daughter, Pauline Dorothea Tutein (31 March 1764 - 18 April 1814), married Hartvig Marcus Frisch. The youngest daughter, Friederica Tutein (20 June 1768 - 17 July 1844), married Thierry Diederich Tutein.

gollark: I mean, Go manages to sort of hit the first two and definitely the third.
gollark: Because programmers somehow can't just convert stuff to machine code given a mere 120 billion clock cycles to work with.
gollark: For Haskell.
gollark: Well, somewhat, although incremental compiles seemed quite fast if I remember right.
gollark: I mean, Rust compiles painlessly if slowly, Nim manages that but somewhat quickly, even Haskell complies quite nicely.

References

  1. "Peter Tutein". Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
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