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|death_place = Copenhagen, Denmark |resting_place = |ethnicity = |spouse = |residence = |citizenship = |fields = |workplaces = |alma_mater = |nationality = Danish |known_for = |occupation = businessman, industrialist |awards = |signature = |footnotes = }} Lauritz Peter Holmblad (8 July 1815 – 16 November 1890), usually referred to as L. P. Holmblad, was a Danish industrialist and philanthropist. He belonged to the circle around Carl Frederik Tietgen, co-founding several of his companies. Holmblad is associated with Amager, Copenhagen, where Holmbladsgade is named after him. ==Family background== L. P. Holmblad was born into a family of industrialists on 8 July 1815. His great-grandfather, a Swedish dyer who emigrated to Denmark in about 1766, introduced new production methods at the Royal Textile Factory where he used ''Rubia'' plants to produce the red dye for the Royal Life Guards' gala uniforms. In 1777 he obtained a royal privilege to set up his own dye factory. It was situated in Sølvgade (No. 38, now Holmblad House) but later moved to the corner of Gothersgade and Regnegade. The enterprise was later taken over by his son, Lauridz Holmblad, who also founded a soap factory in 1805 and started Denmark's first real production of paint in 1819. L. P. Holmblad's father Jacob Holmblad inherited the soap factory in 1827 while his uncle Carl Frederik Holmblad took over the paint factory, the later Sadolin & Holmblad. Jacob Holmblad's soap factory on the corner of Gothersgade and Regnegade also comprised productions of both lacquer and playing cards. His activities also comprised a glue factory and a marrow oil factory in Amager. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lauritz Peter Holmblad」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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