Herman Petersen (13 December 1713 – 13 August 1765) was a Swedishmerchant and director of the Swedish East India Company, amassed significant wealth through copper trade with France. He was part of the 'Skeppsbroadel' and owned several notable properties, including Erstavik and the Petersen House in Stockholm.
Early life
Herman Petersen was born on December 13, 1713, to Abraham Petersen, a wholesaler in Gothenburg, and his wife Christina Tham, a member of the Tham family.[1][2] His grandfather had migrated from Stettin, Prussia, to Stockholm, and subsequently, his father relocated to Gothenburg.[2]
Additionally, Petersen traded great amounts of copper with France.[2] He did so with his company Petersen & Bedoire, that he had started with his brother-in-law, Fredrik Bedoire. Petersen was a member of the so called 'Skeppsbroadel'.[4][a]
After his death, the properties were established as a fideicommissum.[11]
Family
In the year 1741, he entered into matrimony with Magdalena Bedoire, and in 1753, he espoused her cousin, Charlotta Bedoire.[2] Both were members of the Bedoire family,[4] tracing their ancestry to the French Huguenots. The familial unions resulted in the birth of five offspring.[1] A nobiliary particle, denoted as "af," was appended to their familial surname.[2]Herman Magnus af Petersens was his 2nd great-grandson.[12]
The af Petersens family gained official recognition within the Swedish House of Nobility in Stockholm, assigned the number 2071.[1] Additionally, this noble lineage was acknowledged in Helsinki in 1810, bearing the identifier of number 166.[13]
^"Skeppsbroadeln," from Skeppsbron, describes wealthy merchants in 17th to 19th-century Stockholm, originally for socially ambitious ones with significant wealth.[5][6]
Lindahl, Carl Fredrik (1900). Svenska millionärer (in Swedish). Vol. 5. P.A. Huldbergs bokförlags-aktielbolag – via Project Runeberg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)