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Palais Rothschild

Palais Rothschild refers to a number of palaces in Vienna, Austria, which were owned by members of the Austrian branch of the Rothschild banking family. Apart from their sheer size and elegance, they were famous for the huge collections of valuable paintings, statues, furniture, books and armour that they housed, another reflection of the family's vast wealth and prominent position.

The collections were confiscated by the Nazis in 1938, and the palaces were stripped and ruined during World War II. After the war, the heirs received little compensation. What remained of the buildings was sold off, or destroyed and replaced by modern office buildings. The history of these palaces and the art collections they contained is symbolic of the rise and fall of the Austrian branch of the Rothschild family.

(demolished in 1954)

Palais Albert Rothschild

(demolished after 1945)

Palais Nathaniel Rothschild

Palais Rothschild (Metternichgasse)

Palais Rothschild (Prinz-Eugen-Straße)

Palais Rothschild (Renngasse)

The five main Rothschild palaces (Palais Rothschild) in Vienna were:

Landscape with Shepherd and Herd

Aelbert Cuyp

Tielemann Roostermann

Frans Hals

Frans Hals, Portrait of a Man

Frans Hals, Portrait of a Woman

Muleteer

Hans de Jode

Girl and Officer

Gabriel Metsu

Stop at the inn

Isaac van Ostade

Count Philipp Ludwig Wenzel Sinzendorf

Hyacinthe Rigaud

Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in his gallery in Brussels

David Teniers the Younger

Landscape with Hunters

Jan Wynants

The extensive art collections of Louis and Alphonse de Rothschild had to be, in effect, given away by their heirs to the Republic of Austria. Complicated laws and bureaucratic red tape made a full restitution almost impossible. The heirs were forced by the state to sell off their belongings, since they were effectively insolvent.


Since Austria regarded itself as a victim of Nazism, and not as one of the perpetrators, Austrian Jewish victims could barely appeal to the courts on their status. Much of the former Rothschild art collection was taken either to the Kunsthistorisches Museum (KHM) or to the Austrian Gallery in the Belvedere palace.


In the late 1990s, due to outside pressure from the United States, a more thorough examination of its role and behaviour during the Second World War took place in Austria. After long and tedious negotiations, the Austrian government agreed in 1999 to return or pay for the roughly 250 Rothschild art treasures that were looted by the Nazis and absorbed into Austrian State Museums. The items were restituted to the heirs in 1999.


Works from the Rothschild collection that used to be kept at the Kunsthistorisches Museum include:[1]


In the Österreichische Galerie Belvedere:

History of Jews in Austria

National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism

Gabriele Anderl, Alexandra Caruso (ed.). NS-Kunstraub in Österreich und die Folgen. Studienverlag, Innsbruck-Vienna-Bozen. 2005.  3-7065-1956-9

ISBN

Michaela Feurstein, Gerhard Milchram. Jüdisches Wien. Boehlau Verlag, Vienna. 2001.  3-205-99094-3

ISBN

Peter Harclerode, Brendan Pittaway. Lost Masters. Welcome Rain Publishers. 2000.  1-56649-165-7

ISBN

. Meister des Verwirrens: Die Geschäfte des Kunsthändlers Friedrich Welz. Czernin Verlag, Vienna. 2000. ISBN 3-7076-0030-0

Gert Kerschbaumer

Dieter Klein, Martin Kupf, Robert Schediwy (ed.). Stadtbildverluste Wien – Ein Rückblick auf fünf Jahrzehnte. LIT Verlag, Vienna. 2005.  3-8258-7754-X

ISBN

Sophie Lillie. Was einmal war: A Handbook of Vienna's Plundered Art Collections. Czernin Verlag, Vienna. 2003.  3-7076-0049-1

ISBN

Verena Pawlowsky, Harald Wendelin (ed.). Die Republik und das NS-Erbe. Band 1 der Reihe Raub und Rückgabe – Österreich von 1938 bis heute. Mandelbaum Verlag, Vienna. 2005.  3-85476-154-6

ISBN

Thomas Trenkler. Der Fall Rothschild: Chronik einer Enteignung. Czernin Verlag, Vienna. 1999.  3-85485-026-3

ISBN

National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism

Institute for the History of Jews in Austria

Holocaust Victims' Information and Support Center

Republic of Austria | Historikerkommission

The Rothschild Archive