Moritz von Bethmann

Philipp Heinrich Moritz Alexander von Bethmann (from 1854: Freiherr von Bethmann), born 8 October 1811 in Frankfurt am Main, died 2 December 1877 in Frankfurt am Main, was a German banker.

Moritz von Bethmann as seen by a caricaturist.[1]

Life

The oldest son of Simon Moritz von Bethmann (1768–1826) and Louise Friederike née Boode was only 15 years old when his father died. In 1833 he became the head of the Gebrüder Bethmann bank. Von Bethmann focused especially on railway construction. Together with the House of Rothschild, he established three railroad companies in succession: Taunus-Eisenbahn AG in 1836, Frankfurt-Hanauer Eisenbahn in 1844, and the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Nordbahn. In the 1850s he also invested in (among others) the Italian central railroad company, the Austrian state-controlled railroad company, and the Rhein-Nahe-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft.

From 1854 until the loss of Frankfurt's status as a Free City in 1866, von Bethmann was the Prussian consul general in Frankfurt. In 1854 he was elevated to the status of a Freiherr in the Grand Duchy of Baden.

In 1863 he hosted the assembly of German princes in his garden house. Like his father before him, he generously contributed to philanthropic causes and to the arts in Frankfurt.

Von Bethmann, who had to cope with a lifelong handicap due to a hip impediment, was married to Maria née Freiin von Bose (1819–1882), with whom he had two sons and three daughters, among them Ludwig Simon Moritz Freiherr von Bethmann, who was named after his grandfather Simon Moritz and who would later take the reins as the head of the House of Bethmann.

Notes

  1. The picture was accompanied by a verse,

    Moritz Herr von Bethmann heißt er,
    dem Vater gleicht er von Gesicht;
    doch im übrigen beweist er,
    der alte Bethmann ist er nicht.

    (von Bethmann, Moritz is his name,
    his likeness and his father's are the same;
    in every other known respect
    old Bethmann he does not reflect.)
gollark: Between optimal players it probably would. But I don't have one.
gollark: It never really ends in a draw though.
gollark: I don't have smart enough algorithms to "solve" this game, due to the large state space.
gollark: Too bad.
gollark: It doesn't. It obeys the same rules as humans.

See also

Bibliography

  • Wolfgang Klötzer (ed.): Frankfurter Biographie. Vol. 1 A-L, Frankfurt am Main, Verlag Waldemar Kramer, 1994, ISBN 3-7829-0444-3
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