The Carlsberg Family
Published:
27.03.2024
A global brewery group, three philanthropic foundations, two internationally acclaimed museums and a groundbreaking research laboratory together make up the Carlsberg Family.
It is a diverse family, spanning an ambitious international business, research and innovation, and funding for science, the arts, culture and young people.
Not your average family
In addition to the world’s third-largest brewery (Carlsberg Group), the family is home to a laboratory (Carlsberg Research Laboratory), two leading museums (Frederiksborg • Museum of National History and Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek) and three philanthropic foundations (Carlsberg Foundation, New Carlsberg Foundation and Tuborg Foundation).
A living legacy
The Carlsberg Family is the combined legacy of the brewery’s founders, J.C. and Carl Jacobsen, and their wives, Laura and Ottilia. Born of unparalleled endeavour and a desire to give back to society, it is a legacy that remains as relevant as it is wide-ranging.
Under the terms of J.C. Jacobsen’s will, all of his property, including the Old Carlsberg brewery, was transferred in 1888 to the Carlsberg Foundation, which still has a controlling interest in Carlsberg Group today.
History then repeated itself in 1902 when his son Carl transferred the New Carlsberg brewery to the Carlsberg Foundation and established the New Carlsberg Foundation as an independent foundation under the Carlsberg Foundation.
In line with the founders’ instructions, the Carlsberg Foundation’s share of the brewery’s profits continue to be used for the public good. This means today that almost 30 per cent of the dividends from Carlsberg A/S are channelled to science, the arts and young people in the form of grants from the Carlsberg Foundation, the New Carlsberg Foundation and the Tuborg Foundation.