Zobel de Ayala family

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The Zóbel de Ayala clan is an affluent Filipino family originating from northern Spain’s mountainous region of Álava descending from the lineage of Juan Larrazábal Ayala (circa 1475), an influential landowner. Patriarch Antonio de Ayala sailed for Manila in the 1800s and established an industrial partnership with Domingo Roxas, a descendant of Mexican immigrant Antonio Fernández de Roxas of Acapulco, who migrated to the Philippines in 1695, and later with Dr. Johannes Andreas Zobel, a German pharmacist from Hamburg who settled in Manila in 1832.

The clan has been residing in the Philippines for more than 20 generations. Historically, the family has been well-known for their socio-economic and cultural contributions to the country such as the pioneering of Manila's first rail system in the 1900's, establishing the oldest existing financial institution in Southeast Asia, as well as the construction of the first steel bridges in the Philippines.

The Zóbel de Ayalas own and control the Ayala Corporation, the country's largest and oldest conglomerate that includes the Bank of the Philippine Islands, Ayala Land Inc., the Manila Water Company, and Globe Telecom, one of the largest mobile phone networks in the Philippines. The Ayala Corporation was also responsible for developing large areas of Makati City into residential subdivisions (gated communities) between the 1940s and 1960s. These subdivisions include Forbes Park, Dasmariñas Village, Bel-Air Village, San Lorenzo Village, Urdaneta Village and Magallanes Village. In addition, Ayala Corporation later developed the center of Makati into a mixed-use industrial development now known as the Ayala Center and its surrounding throughfares (Ayala Avenue, Makati Avenue, Paseo de Roxas & Sen. Gil Puyat Ave.), which now comprise the Makati skyline. In 2001, the family acquired the 54-hectare Fort Bonifacio Global City development in Metro Manila. Other industrial and real estate developments also exist in other parts of Luzon and Cebu including several international partnerships in banking, construction and Information Technology.

The De La Salle-Santiago Zóbel School was named after Jacobo Santiago Zóbel (1954-1965), the eldest son of Enrique Zobel. The Primo Zobel Award has been annually given by the family for the past eighty years in recognition to outstanding citizens who propagate the intellectual development of the country. The prestigious Ayala Foundation has been assisting the country's struggling cultural heritage and development for many years.

CEO Jaime Augusto Zóbel de Ayala II is among the three Filipino individuals included in the Forbes magazine's list of the World's Richest people, ranking 349th in 2007.[1]

Zobel Dynasty

The Zobels are a wealthy Spanish-Filipino family. They run Ayala Corporation, the oldest and largest conglomerate in the Philippines, founded in 1834. The company has interests in real estate, water and telecom, among other industries. Jaime and Bea Zobel's oldest son is Jaime Agusto Zobel a.k.a (jza). JZA is married to Elizabeth Eder (Lizzie) Zobel and they have four children, Mariana Beatriz, Jaime Eugenia Ines and Mercedes. Fernando Zobel is married to Catherine Silverio (Kit) and they have 4 children, Natasha Consuelo, Sylvia, Katya and Fernando Alvaro (Ferdie). Next is the loved Bea Zobel known for her great efforts in trying to promote the country she loves so much. She was widowed 12 years ago but has managed to raise 3 charming children, Jaime Urquijo Zobel followed by Paloma Urquijo Zobel and Monica Urquijo Zobel. Fernando Ortiz Zobel heads Azucarera Zobel, an Ayala Land subsidiary with strengths in the agricultural industry, and is married to Consuelo Gracia Austria. They have one son, Carlos. The rest of the family members all live in Spain. The Zobels have been in the Philippines for nine generations. They have been dubbed "Philippine's most rich and elite family". Forbes has released its list of the 40 richest Filipinos.

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