The name of Nobel usually calls to mind Alfred Nobel, inventor of
dynamite, and the internationally prestigious prizes that bear his name.
But Alfred was only one member of a creative and innovative family who
built an industrial empire in prerevolutionary Russia. The saga begins
with an emigré from Sweden, Immanuel Nobel, who was an architect, a
pioneer producer of steam engines, and a maker of armaments, including
the underwater mines that were widely used in the Crimean War.
Immanuel's sons included Alfred; Robert, who directed the family's
activities in the Caspian oil fields; and Ludwig, an engineering genius
and manufacturing magnate whose boundless energy and fierce
determination created the Russian petroleum industry. Ludwig's son
Emanuel showed similar mettle, shrewdly bargaining with the Rothschilds
for control of the Russian markets and competing head-on with Standard
Oil, Royal Dutch, and Shell for lucrative world markets. Emanuel not
only expanded the Russian oil industry but also helped to modernize the
Russian navy and commanded a fleet of three hundred ships. Perhaps no
family in history has played so decisive a role in building an
industrial empire in an underdeveloped but resource-rich nation. Yet the
achievements of the Nobel family have been largely forgotten.