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Anselm Salomon von Rothschild

Anselm Salomon von Schwartz Rothschild, Baron Rothschild (29 January 1803 – 27 July 1874) was an Austrian banker, founder of the Creditanstalt, and a member of the Vienna branch of the Rothschild family.

Anselm Salomon von Rothschild

(1803-01-29)29 January 1803

27 July 1874(1874-07-27) (aged 71)

Banker, philanthropist, member of the Imperial Council

Charlotte Nathan Rothschild

Salomon Mayer von Rothschild & Caroline Stern

Mayer Anselm Leon (1827–1828)

Caroline Julie Anselm (1830–1907), "Julie", married Adolph Carl von Rothschild (1823–1900), son of at Naples, lived at Rothschild Castle in Pregny-Chambésy near Geneva

Carl Mayer von Rothschild

(1832–1924), married Freiherr Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild (1828–1901), banker at Frankfurt

Mathilde Hannah von Rothschild

Sarah Luisa (1834–1924), married Baron (1829–1905), lived at Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice

Raimondo Franchetti

(1836–1905), maecenas at Vienna

Nathaniel Anselm

(1839–1898), moved to the United Kingdom, had Waddesdon Manor built from 1874

Ferdinand James

(1844–1911), took over the running of the family's Viennese bank

Albert Salomon

(1847–1922), lived at Eythrope, UK, near her brother Ferdinand, from whom she inherited Waddeson Manor, and later moved to Grasse, France.

Alice Charlotte

He was born in the Imperial City of Frankfurt, the son of Freiherr Salomon Mayer von Rothschild (1774–1855), ancestor of the family's Austrian branch, and his wife Caroline Stern (1782–1854). He had a younger sister Betty (1805–1874), who married her French uncle James Mayer de Rothschild.


According to the testament left by progenitor Mayer Amschel Rothschild, the children of the Rothschild family were obliged to enter into matrimony with their first and second cousins. Anselm Salomon did so in 1826 by marrying Charlotte Nathan Rothschild (1807–1859), daughter of his uncle Nathan Mayer Rothschild (1777–1836) from the British branch of the family; together they had eight children:

Life[edit]

In 1820 Anselm Salomon's father Salomon Mayer had established a bank company at Vienna, financing the building of the Austrian Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway in the 1830s. He had been a confidant of Chancellor Prince Klemens von Metternich and also a discreet lender of the Bohemian and Hungarian nobility. Upon his death in 1855, his son and heir Anselm created the k.k. privilegierte Österreichische Credit-Anstalt für Handel und Gewerbe, which evolved to the largest bank of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy.


Anselm himself gradually retired from the banking business in the 1860s and participated in the Austrian Southern Railway company. He rejected the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and refused to accommodate any side with money. As a philanthropist, he founded the Vienna Rothschild Hospital in 1869. He was also a prominent art collector, honorary citizen, and an appointed member of the Austrian House of Lords from 1861. He died in Vienna.


He began the art collection that his son Ferdinand bequeathed in 1898 to the British Museum as the Waddesdon Bequest, collecting mostly metalwork, especially of the Northern Renaissance. The Holy Thorn Reliquary was one of his purchases.[2] His collection was catalogued and partly photographed by the art historian Franz Schestag in 1866 and 1872.[3]

The Rothschilds; a Family Portrait by . Atheneum Publishers (1962) ISBN 156836220X (1998 reprint)

Frederic Morton

The Rothschilds, a Family of Fortune by . Alfred A. Knopf (1973) ISBN 0394487737

Virginia Cowles

Rothschild: The Wealth and Power of a Dynasty by . Scribner, London (1988) ISBN 0684190184

Derek Wilson

House of Rothschild : Money's Prophets: 1798-1848 by . Viking Press (1998) ISBN 0670857688

Niall Ferguson

The House of Rothschild (vol. 2) : The World's Banker: 1849-1999 by Niall Ferguson. (1999) ISBN 0756753937

Diane Publishing Co.

Thornton, Dora (2015), A Rothschild Renaissance: The Waddesdon Bequest, 2015, British Museum Press,  978-0-7141-2345-5

ISBN

Media related to Anselm Salomon von Rothschild at Wikimedia Commons

- an international center in London for research into the history of the Rothschild family.

The Rothschild Archive