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Ceawlin Thynn, 8th Marquess of Bath

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Ceawlin Thynn
Born6th June 1974
NationalityBritish
OccupationBusinessman
PositionsExecutive Chairman - Wombat Holdings

Director - Finmetron AB

Executive Chairman - Longleat Enterprises Ltd Trustee & Investment Director - The Lion Trust

Ceawlin Thynn, born 6 June 1974, is a British businessman and the second child of Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath and his wife, Anna Gael Gyarmathy.[1] He is involved in a number of companies in the leisure, tourism, real estate and financial services sectors.[2]

Education

Ceawlin Thynn attended Kingdown Comprehensive School in Warminster, Wiltshire, and read economics and philosophy at University College London. [3][4]

Business

Ceawlin Thynn began his business career as an emerging markets specialist at the London investment bank Caspian Securities, before becoming a partner in Sabre Projects – a real estate development firm.[5] At Sabre he put together a project with Group Menatep, the holding company of Russia’s then-largest oil company, Yukos, to develop an internationally branded mid-market hotel in every major city in Russia.[6][7]

Since June 2010, Ceawlin Thynn has been a director at Finmetron AB, a Swedish listed firm offering factoring services in Russia. [8][9][10]

In 2008, he formed The Lion Trust, a private equity vehicle of which he is the principal.[11] The Lion Trust invests in a range of mature and emerging markets. [12] [13]

In January 2009, Ceawlin Thynn became chairman of Longleat Enterprises, a limited company which comprises operations at Longleat House and Safari Park on the family estate of Longleat, near Warminster in Wiltshire, as well as the commercial activities at Cheddar Gorge, in the Mendip Hills in Somerset.[14][15] [16] Longleat Safari Park opened in 1966 as the first drive through safari park outside Africa, and is currently home to over five hundred animals, including giraffe, monkeys, rhino, lion, tigers and wolves.[17][18] Following Lord Bath’s retirement in 2010, Ceawlin Thynn hired a new Chief Executive – David Bradley, formerly of Legoland – to take the Longleat product and brand forward.[19][20] Together they have distilled a long term strategy for Longleat, hiring designers from Hollywood to develop new attractions in addition to the Safari Park including the ‘Jungle Kingdom’, ‘Monkey Temple’ & ‘Hunters of the Sky’. [21][22] Cheetahs are the most recent additions to the safari park with six having arrived in August 2011.[23] Four lion cubs were born in September 2011, making a total of 10 cubs born this year, and Disney named two of them Simba and Nala as part of a co-promotion agreement for the upcoming Lion King 3D film.[24]

Longleat House was built in the sixteenth century by Sir John Thynn on the site of a dissolved priory, and in 1949 became the first stately home in Britain to be opened to the public on a commercial basis.[25][26][27] The house, park and attractions are open from mid-February to the start of November each year.[28] The 9,800-acre estate, of which the park occupies 900 acres, has long been one of the Britain’s top tourist attractions, and has motivated other large landowners to generate income from their heritage in response to rising maintenance costs.[29][30] Longleat leases 400 acres of land to Center Parcs for the operation of the Longleat Forest holiday village.[31]

In 2010, Ceawlin Thynn became Executive Chairman of Wombat's Holdings GmbH – a chain of premium quality hostels in Germany and Austria – having acquired a majority stake in the company.[32][33] [34] Wombat’s hostels were voted the best in the world by customers of Hostelworld in 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009.[35] In 2010, the Wombat’s City Hostel in Vienna won a Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of ‘twelve years of unparalleled service’.[36] The existing offering includes three units in Vienna comprising a total of nearly 1,000 beds, one unit in Berlin with 350 beds and one in Munich with 300 beds.[37] The company is now preparing to expand into other major European cities, including London, Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, Budapest, Prague and Rome. [38] Wombat’s is widely considered to be the premium product within the hostel sector.[39] [40]

Media Coverage

Ceawlin Thynn has been mentioned in a number of UK national newspapers. Significant recent examples include:

An article by Jasper Gerard published in The Daily Telegraph on 22 April 2011 titled, Ceawlin Thynn interview: It was a different normality, says the young lion of Longleat, discussing his childhood, his relationship with his father, and future of the Longleat Estate. [41]

An article by Matthew Goodman published in The Sunday Times on 17 July 2011 titled, Longleat heir moves into hostels, outlining his acquisition of a majority stake in Wombat’s Holdings, and his plans for expanding the business.[42]

An article by Emine Saner published in the London Evening Standard on 16 June 2004 titled, The viscount who cleaned the loos – a comprehensive profile of his early years at Longleat, his attitude to his father’s eccentricities, and his business career.[43]

References