Jakob Fugger is the richest man in history. Musk and Bezos may envy him

Jakob Fugger of Augsburg was a pioneer of global trade and one of the richest men of all time. Thanks to innovative financial management methods and bold investments, he built a power that changed the face of Europe. His influence reached from the imperial courts to the poorest inhabitants of his hometown.
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Jakob Fugger portrayed by Albrecht Dürer
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As “Deutsche Welle” explains, estimates indicate that Fugger's total fortune, converted into today's dollars, would amount to as much as 900 billion. At the peak of his power, he controlled 2.2 percent. Europe's economy – more than Rockefeller's share of US GDP.
The above-mentioned Rockefeller had a fortune that at its peak in 1937 amounted to 1.5 percent. the country's GDP at that time. After taking into account inflation, his fortune would be approximately USD 499 billion today.
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The Fugger family was already wealthy, but Jacob took it to a new level. Jakob Fugger was born in 1459 in Augsburg. After his father's death, he quickly had to take over some of the family responsibilities. Initially, he planned to become a priest, but his mother sent him to study economics in Venice. There he gained banking knowledge, which he used to strengthen the family business.
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Fugger went to Austria, where he invested in silver mines, lending money to Archduke Sigismund Habsburg in exchange for access to valuable deposits. Thanks to this, he quickly multiplied his fortune and gained influence. He then invested in copper mines in the Carpathians, working with the engineer Johanness Thurzo. Copper production and trade brought him further huge profits.
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As Greg Steinmetz, Fugger's biographer, emphasizes, he was the first merchant to trade on a global scale. At a time when Europeans knew only “half the globe”, Jakob Fugger took advantage of new trade routes and innovations such as double-entry bookkeeping, which he learned in Venice. Thanks to this, it always had an information advantage over its competitors.
Jakob Fugger is the richest man in history. Almost no one knows him today
Thanks to his education, knowledge of languages and modern accounting, he was able to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the developing trade and mining industry. Investments in silver and copper mines and cooperation with the Habsburgs were crucial.
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Fugger financed kings, popes and great expeditions, and his loans made it possible, among others, the election of Emperor Charles V or Magellan's journey. Participation in the sale of indulgences contributed to the outbreak of the Reformation. He also built the world's first social housing estate – Fuggerei, which is still in operation today.
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The entrepreneur not only revolutionized trade and banking, but also influenced the fate of entire countries and the Church. His actions opened the way to modern lending practices and contributed to social changes that we still feel today. He was also a pioneer of business journalism, creating his own news network.
Despite his fortune, Jakob Fugger was lonely. He died in 1525 without his family at his side. He left his entire estate to his nephews.





