1837
Immanuel Nobel emigrates from Sweden to reach St Petersburg, Russia, with his family 1842.
Read more »
1859
Immanuel Nobel returns to Sweden and the creditors of his insolvent workshop in St Petersburg plead to his son Ludvig to continue the operations.
Read more »
1862
The Ludvig Nobel Engineering Works Company is formed in St Petersburg.
1864
1870
1872
Ludvig Nobel and Peter Bilderling build a factory for weapons production in Izhevsk in the Urals.
1873
The monopoly-contract system for renting oil deposits is abolished in favour of public auction of contracts in the Caucasus.
1874
Robert Nobel buys a refinery and a plot of land in Baku.
1875
1876
Ludvig Nobel sends his works manager, Alexander Bary, to the USA to study American oil management.
Ludvig Nobel and his son, Emanuel, visit Robert in Baku.
1877
Ludvig Nobel lectures on oil extraction in Baku at the Imperial Russian Technical Society.
1878
1879
The limited company, Branobel, is formed by Ludvig, Robert and Alfred Nobel, Peter Bilderling and others. The share capital is 3 million roubles.
The Nobels’ employee, Engineer Alfred Törnqvist, is sent to the USA to study the American oil industry.
1880
Robert Nobel leaves Baku and Alfred Törnqvist becomes manager of Branobel.
1881
Ludvig’s son, Emanuel Nobel, becomes responsible for Branobel’s economic matters.
Tsar Alexander II is murdered in a bomb attack. Ludvig Nobel’s import of Alfred’s dynamite is stopped.
1882
1883
1884
1885
A tanker, Branobel’s Sviet, arrives in London with paraffin in bulk for the first time.
1886
Financial crisis at Branobel.
1887
1888
Tsar Alexander III visits Baku. Emanuel Nobel receives the Imperial Medal and is invited to become a Russian citizen.
1890
1892
1893
Branobel makes a record profit. Its capital is now 20 million roubles.
1896
Robert Nobel dies on 7 August and Alfred Nobel on 10 December.
1898
1899
The Evangelical-Protestant church is established in Baku, partly financed by Nobel.
1900
1902
1903
Branobel’s attempts to merge with Standard Oil fail.
1904
1905
Strikes force the Nobels’ office and works in St Petersburg to close.
1906
1907
1909
1911
1912
1914
The First World War breaks out on 28 July.
1917
1918
The Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan declares itself independent on 28 May.
1919
1920
Azerbaijan is occupied by the Red Army and becomes a Soviet Republic on 28 April.
1922
International oil companies get together to boycott all business with the Bolsheviks, but they fail.
1932
Emanuel Nobel dies.
1936
1970
1999
The 100 years anniversary of the Protestant-Evangelical Church, die Kirsche, in central Baku, partially financed by the Nobel family.