Sons Hans and Ole Bording take over as managers. The company expands.
1926-1933
His widow, Ellen, continues the printing business. Property at Meinungsgade 6-8 purchased.
1883-1926
F.E. Bording's nephew, Victor Pedersen, takes the Bording surname and continues his uncle's life's work. Focus shifts to commercial printing jobs. Label printing and a paper division started in 1886.
1844-1883
F.E. Bording is founded. The Danish Constitution of 1849 puts an end to censorship, and printing of literary books resumes. The business is expanded to include lithography. The company is healthy and well-consolidated.
1835-1844
Marianne and her son, Frederik Emanuel Bording (F.E. Bording) disagree strongly on how the business should be run. After nine years, they stop working together, as a "privilege to operate as a printer" becomes vacant — allowing Frederik Emanuel to start his own...
1822-1835
His widow, Marianne, continues running the mortgaged printing business. It specialises in dream books, novels about robbers, and light fiction.
1812-1822
Seest's nephew Carl Adolph Bording takes over the printing business, but is forced to work in a side job as an auctioneer until his death at age 37.
1792-1812
Mathias Seest acquires "citizenship as a printer of books". Beginning with literary and scientific works, he later shifts to broadside ballads on account of the censorship introduced following the French Revolution.