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Egon Caesar Corti - The Rise of the House of Rothschild

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Egon Caesar Corti The Rise of the House of Rothschild
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Without suspicion of exaggeration it can be said that The Rise of the House of Rothschild is one of the most exciting and important historical works published in our times. Awaited for many years, it is a mighty canvas of turbulent, scheming, warring Europe and of that family of golden Titans who pulled the strings on which kings, generals, and whole nations danced. In Germany it created a furore immediately after publication.Its author Count Corti already has a fine reputation in Europe as a biographer and historian. Before writing The Rise of the House of Rothschild, he spent three years in research. When he sat down to tell the story, his desk resembled the secret archives of a Foreign Office. Corti follows the strange trail of the Rothschilds with a keen instinct for the unraveling of economic history and diplomatic intrigue, and an equal sense of human values that makes his book as fascinating as it is important.Emil Ludwig, in the New York Herald Tribune, says:This history of the Hpuse of Rothschild constitutes a magnificent expression of the basic foundation, the factors of power and the mistakes of construction of the old Europe. The reader will find in this book a condensed history of Europe, chock-full of instructive and amusing details, hidden away in the story of a banking house.The New York Times says:An uncommonly fascinating history of a financial dynasty which played a more important part in shaping the destiny of the world than many of the ruling houses.

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The Rise of the House of Rothschild COUNT EGON CAESAR CORTI Translated from the - photo 1
The Rise of the House of Rothschild COUNT EGON CAESAR CORTI Translated from the - photo 2
The Rise of the House of Rothschild

COUNT EGON CAESAR CORTI

Translated from the German by Brian and Beatrix Lynn

1770-1830 Cosmopolitan Book Corporation NEW YORK MCMXXVIII Copyright 1928 - photo 3

1770-1830

Cosmopolitan Book Corporation

NEW YORK MCMXXVIII

Copyright, 1928, by Cosmopolitan Book Corporation.

Printed in the United States of America by

J. J. LITTLE AND IVES COMPANY, NEW YORK

FOREWORD

Historians, in interpreting the nineteenth century, have laid stress on many and various aspects of the period under study; and descriptions of isolated periods, single episodes, and individuals are scattered amongst hundreds and even thousands of books. On the other hand, certain special features of the period under consideration have been, for various reasons, entirely neglected.

An example of such neglect is the ignoring by historians of the role played by the Rothschild family in the history of the nineteenth century, and the object of this work is to appraise the important influence of this family on the politics of the period, not only in Europe but throughout the world. For, strangely enough, the influence of the Rothschilds is barely mentioned, or at the most casually referred to, in otherwise comprehensive and painstaking historical treatises.

Special literature dealing with the House of Rothschild usually falls into one of two groups, either fulsome paeans of praise commissioned by the House itself, or scurrilous pamphlets inspired by hatredboth equally unpleasant. There are, however, two works of serious value in existence, which are partially compiled from legal documents, but they are of small scope. One is by an employee of the Rothschilds, Christian Wilhelm Berghoeffer, and the other is the impartial work of Dr. Richard Ehrenberg; but these treat only of isolated incidents in the history of the House, and throw no light on its pan-European importance.

The object of the present work, which deals with the period 1770-1830, is to trace the rise of the House of Rothschild from its small beginnings to the great position it attained, culminating in the year of its great crisis.

In the course of my researches I found that references to the name of Rothschild in official documents and in books of memoirs were as common as they are rare in contemporary textbooks. I made a point of collecting all available data until my drawers were literally crammed with letters, deeds, and documents containing the name of Rothschild, and bearing dates of almost every year of the nineteenth century. My next step was to visit the various European capitals which had been the scene of the family activities, in order to enrich my store of references with all the relevant literature. The subject is indeed inexhaustible, but the material I had amassed encouraged me to essay a complete picture.

The subject required the most delicate treatment, but my determination to undertake the work was accompanied by the definite intention of according it complete impartiality, for I was convinced from the beginning that a prejudiced outlook would render the work utterly valueless.

The House of Rothschild, as will be readily understood, did not throw open its archives to my inspection, for it is particularly careful in guarding its more important business secrets. But this was not entirely without its advantage, for it left me completely free from political considerations and uninfluenced by racial, national, and religious predilections or antipathies. I was thus enabled, in accordance with my wish, to begin an independent historical research into the part played by this House in the nineteenth century, which I knew to be far more important than is commonly thought.

The general scheme of this work will be built upon facts alone, in a practical way such as will help us to form our own judgment on individuals and the part they played in world events.

I should like to take this opportunity of expressing my special sense of gratitude toward all those whose advice and assistance have been so valuable to me in my work.

Above all I have to thank Dr. Bittner, Director of the State Archives at Vienna, as well as his exceedingly helpful staff, Professors Gross, Antonius, Reinoehl, Schmidt, Wolkan, and his Chief Clerk, Herr Marek. I should also like to thank Lieutenant-Colonel von Carlshausen, grandnephew of the man who helped the Rothschilds up the first rung of the ladder, and the Director of the Prussian Secret State Archives at Berlin, Geheimrat Klinkenborg. My thanks are also due to Dr. Losch of the Prussian State Library in Berlin, Dr. A. Richel at Frankfort and the staff of the Municipal Museum in that city who, together with the Director of the Portrait Collection in the Vienna National Library, Hofrat Dr. Rottinger and Dr. Wilhelm Beetz, who so kindly assisted me with the illustrations.

The Author

The material was collected for over a period of three and a half years, and only after much care has been spent on it do I now offer it to the public. It is submitted in the hope that it will be judged in accordance with its intentions. It is inspired by an intense love of truth, and it relates the story of an unseen but infinitely powerful driving force which permeated the whole of the nineteenth century.

Vienna, July, 1927 .

CONTENTS

CHAPTER

I

The Origins and the Early Activities of the Frankfort Family Rothschild

CHAPTER

II

The Rothschild Family During the Napoleonic Era

CHAPTER

III

The Great Napoleonic Crisis and Its Exploitation by the House of Rothschild

CHAPTER

IV

The Brothers Rothschild During the Period of Congresses, 1818-1822

CHAPTER

V

The Rothschild Business Throughout the World

CHAPTER

VI

The House of Rothschild Rides the Storm

NOTES

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES

BIBLIOGRAPHY

ILLUSTRATIONS

Ancestral Home of the Rothschild Family

Frontispiece

Frankfort at the End of the Eighteenth Century Facing

p.

The Ghetto in Frankfort

Title-page of a Rothschild Coin Catalogue, 1770-1780

A Page of the Rothschild Catalogue of Rare Coins

William, Elector of Hesse

Carl Frederick Buderus von Carlshausen

Burning of British Goods, November, 1810, at Frankfort-on-the-Main

One of the Much Coveted Drafts of Meyer Amschel Rothschild

James Baron von Rothschild

Nathan Rothschild

Original Sketch for Coat of Arms Submitted by the Rothschild Family in 1817

Coat of Arms Adopted by the Rothschild Family in 1817

Frederick von Gentz

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