Mille-Marie Treschow

Mille-Marie Treschow

Coat of arms.
Noble family Treschow
Father Aage Gerhard Treschow
Mother Nanna, née Meidell
Born Larvik, Vestfold
Occupation Estate owner

Mille-Marie Treschow (born 3 April 1954 in Larvik, Vestfold) is a Norwegian landlord and businessperson. Treschow belongs to the Danish and Norwegian noble family of Treschow.

Fritzøehus

Family

Mille-Marie Treschow is the daughter of estate owner Gerhard Aage Treschow (19232001) and Nanna, née Meidell (born 1926).[1] Her name partly reflects that of her then-recently deceased aunt, Marie Treschow (1913-1952), who was paralyzed in a 1933 diving accident but then became a Scandinavian philanthropist and subject of a biography by Eivind Berggrav.

She has married three times and is currently separated. She has two children born of her second marriage (19842000), with Andreas Stang.[1] In 2004 she married businessman Stein Erik Hagen.[1] In 2012 they announced their separation.[2]

Education and business

Mille-Marie Treschow has been a pupil at Croft House School in Dorset, England. She has also Norwegian examen artium. She received a Master of Business Administration in Switzerland, and she has additionally economic studies from the United States of America and home economics studies from France.[3]

Based in Larvik, Treschow manages Treschow Fritzøe an extensive consortium consisting of properties and forest as well as industry, trade, and other enterprises. She owns a private estate and resides at Fritzøehus Manor in Larvik. Succeeding her father in 1986,[1] she is the 6th generation owning and running the family industry.

Treschow has an estimated private fortune of 1.5 billion Norwegian kroner (NOK) or about $250 million USD.[4] She is as such one of the wealthiest women in Norway. Her husband Stein Erik Hagen is considered being worth about 10 billion NOK or about $2 billion USD.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Treschow-Fritzøe: Familien
  2. Aftenposten (20 August 2012): Stein Erik Hagen og Mille-Marie Treschow separeres
  3. VG Nett (27 April 2004): Spår rush av kvinnelige toppledere
  4. Hegnar Online: Kapitals 400 rikeste
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