List of banking families
Banking families are families which have been involved in banking for multiple generations, in the modern era generally as owners or co-owners of banks, often named for their families. Banking families have been important in the history of banking, especially before the 20th century.
Antiquity
- House of Egibi of Mesopotamia
- Murashu family of Mesopotamia
Modern
Family | Companies | Place of origin | Principal countries of residence |
---|---|---|---|
Altoviti | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Bardi | Compagnia dei Bardi | Florence | Republic of Florence |
Baring | Barings Bank, Baring Vostok Capital Partners | Bremen | Germany, UK |
Berenberg-Gossler-Seyler | Berenberg Bank | Antwerp | Belgium, Germany |
Bordier | Bordier & Cie | Geneva | Switzerland |
Botín | Banco Santander, Bankinter | Santander | Spain |
Cerchi | Valdarno, Tuscany | Republic of Florence | |
Chigi | Banco Chigi | Siena | Republic of Siena |
Clifford | Clifford, Herefordshire | UK, The Netherlands | |
Coutts | Coutts & Company | London | UK |
Fugger | Augsburg | Germany | |
Goldman–Sachs | Goldman Sachs | New York | USA |
Gondi | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Hoare | C. Hoare & Co | London | UK |
Hope | Hope & Co. (later part of ABN-Amro) | Amsterdam | Netherlands |
Hottinger | Hottinger Group | Paris | France, Switzerland, UK |
Hochstetter | Höchstädt | Germany | |
Medici | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Mellon | Bank of New York Mellon | Pittsburgh, PA | USA |
Metzler | Metzler Bank | Frankfurt | Germany |
Miles | Miles & Co (later part of NatWest) | Bristol | UK |
Montagu | Samuel Montagu & Co. (later part of HSBC) | London | UK |
Morgan | Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan Chase | New York | USA |
Oppenheim | Sal. Oppenheim, Deutsche Bank | Cologne | Germany |
Ovadiah | Wadiah Capital | Iraq | Switzerland, Panama, Great Britain, Israel |
Ovia | Zenith Bank | Lagos | Nigeria |
Peruzzi | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Rockefeller | Rockefeller Financial Services (Rockefeller & Co), J.P. Morgan Chase | Cleveland, OH, New York, NY |
USA |
Rothschild | N M Rothschild & Sons, RIT Capital Partners, Rothschild & Co, Edmond de Rothschild Group | Frankfurt | Germany |
Safra | Safra Group (Banco Safra, J. Safra Sarasin, Safra National Bank of New York) | Beirut | Brazil |
Salviati | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Scali | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Schröder | Schroders | Hamburg | Germany |
Simonetti | Rome | Italy, UK, Israel | |
Smith | Smith's Bank (later part of NatWest) | Nottingham | UK |
Solaro | Asti | Italy | |
Strozzi | Florence | Republic of Florence | |
Van De Put | Van De Put & Co Private Bankers | Anvers | Belgium |
Van Lanschot | F. van Lanschot Bankiers | Zundert | Netherlands |
Wallenberg | Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken, Investor | Linköping | Sweden |
Warburg | M. M. Warburg & Co., Warburg Pincus, UBS | Hamburg | Germany |
Welser | Augsburg | Germany | |
gollark: Yeeees.
gollark: Anyway, it is of course only possible to hardcode all primes within Haskell, due to its lazy evaluation.
gollark: Not in a fast-to-index way without horrible amounts of RAM.
gollark: The lookup table? It isn't unless you hardcode all primes ever.
gollark: I mean, it's faster on numbers for which the lookup table is valid, but so is hardcoding the answers.
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