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The two great banking dynasties of Frankfurt am Main were the House of Bethmann and the House of Rothschild. For several decades their affairs were closely intertwined while they carried on a vigorous rivalry. On occasion they would cooperate – as business partners but also, not least thanks to the enlightened outlook of Simon Moritz von Bethmann, with the shared goal of enfranchising the Jews of Frankfurt.

Historical background

Ever since the discriminatory Decretals of Pope Gregory IX in the High Middle Ages, Jews in the Holy Roman Empire had led a precarious existence, condemned to a status of perpetual servitude by Church doctrine and imperial decree, confined to narrow, unhealthy ghettos, and threatened by outbreaks of mob violence when the Jews came in handy as scapegoats. At long last this began to change towards the end of the 18th century. Besides the French revolution and its call for equality and freedom, liberalizing influences came from the changes agreed by the Vienna Congress, from the 1820 constitution for the Grand Duchy of Hesse, and from the specific provisions concerning Jews in the supplement to the Frankfurt constution and the Frankfurt council decree of 1824.[1]

As seen by writers

Egon Caesar Conte Corti

Like snapshots, two quotes from Egon Caesar Conte Corti highlight the great strides made by the Rothschilds in a very short timespan. The first is a glimpse at the beginnings of the Rothschilds' rise. The year is 1794, but as yet Gebrüder Bethmann are too powerful for the upstart to break into the game.


The second, from 1820, shows what a difference a few decades make.


The shock of the bigoted burgomaster is palpable: what is the world coming to, he is thinking, when minorities no longer know their place?

Johann Philipp Freiherr von Bethmann

Following in the footsteps of his famous ancestor, Johann Philipp Freiherr von Bethmann in 1994 praised Mayer Amschel Rothschild and his sons for their achievements. The occasion was Hans Sarkowicz' book Die großen Frankfurter, in which well-known Frankfurt personages were invited to describe notable citizens of Frankfurt and their achievements.

Bethmann notes the initial rivalry between the two Houses as bankers to the Landgrave and Elector of Hesse, which however soon gave way to preferment of Rothschild.[4] Simon Moritz at first found this setback hard to take and complained about the aggressive style of doing business exhibited by the Rothschilds.[5]

Eventually, however, he came to express respect for Mayer Amschel's five sons:

On occasion the fierce rivals would cooperate, for example in raising the tax commutation payments demanded as the price of freedom for Frankfurt's Jews. In 1812 Grand Duke Karl Theodor von Dalberg appointed Simon Moritz von Bethmann and Mayer Amschel Rothschild as members of the electoral body (Wahlkollegium) for the district of Frankfurt. Bethmann supported the 300px|right|Philanthropin, the secondary school of Frankfurt's Israelite Community, both in words and in deed in the form of a several thousand gulden grant. Amschel Mayer von Rothschild, Mayer Amschel's eldest son, and the Staatsrat Simon Moritz were among the bankers arguing for the establishment of a currency reserve bank in 1824. Both banks co-promoted the construction of the first railroad in the Rhine Main Region in 1836.[6]

The "Philanthropin" was a Jewish secondary school co-financed by Rothschild and Bethmann in 1804. It recently reopened as the I.E. Lichtigfeld school, a Jewish secondary school also open to non-Jews.
The "Philanthropin" was a Jewish secondary school co-financed by Rothschild and Bethmann in 1804. It recently reopened as the I.E. Lichtigfeld school, a Jewish secondary school also open to non-Jews.

At the time of Mayer Amschel's birth, Frankfurt's Jews were still "serfs" in "slavery", as Ludwig Börne said, not mincing his words. As "footmen of the Imperial chamber", Jews were subjects of His Majesty the Holy Roman Emperor. In spite of being restricted to a narrowly circumscribed range of retail, moneylending or pawnbrokerage businesses, a number of families managed to become prosperous by the end of the 18th century, foremost the Speyer family. Rothschilds had been small-scale peddlers, and Mayer Amschel himself had been a moderately successful retailer, a dealer in bills of exchange as well as a more traditional court Jew. When Mayer Amschel died in 1812 he was a fully enfranchised citizen of Frankfurt[7]. The walls of the ghetto had come down and he had laid the groundwork for the rise of his family to world renown.[6]

The speed and breadth of the Rothschilds' rapid rise is something that even historians today find difficult to explain.[8][9]

Börne described Mayer Amschel thus:

When Prince Wilhelm von Hessen became the sovereign in 1785, Mayer Amschel reinforced his activities in his direction, aided by his ally Buderus, the man who held the Landgrave's purse strings. Mayer Amschel's young sons supporrted him increasingly, aiding the House of Rothschild's rise to fortune. The two older sons Amschel Mayer and Salomon Mayer probably made partner in 1796. In 1800 they and their father, at the latter's request, became imperial court factors, based on their deliveries to the army. In 1802 Mayer Amschel attained the appointment of his sons as masters of the war payroll, and in 1803 he himself rose to the post of court agent in Kassel where he maintained a branch office.[10]

The Landgrave (since 1803 Elector) was one of the richest monarchs of the age thanks to the "English subsidies", i.e., the sale of his subjects as soldiers. He invested the profits by turning them into loans, for which he accepted interest from creditors in the form of bills of exchange. From 1801 Rothschild took an ever greater part in the dealings of the Landgrave. Trade in government bonds had now gained in importance; there were bond issues for Denmark, Hessen-Darmstadt, Kurbaden, and the Johanniterorden. But Mayer Rothschild also entered into financial transactions with the Princes of Ysenburg, Büdingen and Thurn und Taxis.[11]

What boosted Rothschild's fortunes, however, was the managing of the exiled Elector's assets. Mayer Amschel transferred liquidity to Nathan in England who advised that the Elector's "getaway money" be invested in English government bonds. In 1807 finally Mayer Amschel was the sole banker to the Elector. In 1806 Karl Theodor von Dalberg became Prince primate of the Rheinbund and lord of Frankfurt, from 1810 as Grand Duke. Mayer Amschel quickly adapted and entered into a relationship with Dalberg. He lent him money for his extravagant lifestyle and financed his journey to Paris in 1810 to attend the wedding of Napolean and Marie Louise. This earned his youngest son Jacob (James) a residency permit for Paris. In addition Dalberg warned Rothschild when his connection to the absconded Elector became a threat for Rothschild. At the same time Simon Moritz von Bethmann also maintained a most cordial relationship with Dahlberg.

Frankfurt's Jews had greeted Dalberg's instatement in 1806 with high hopes but at first they were disappointed. It was only in 1811 that they received the legal status of citizens. However, as Paul Arnsberg writes in his book, Geschichte der Frankfurter Juden,

For the Grand Duchy, emancipation meant that it would lose the annual protection money from the Jews, which it could ill afford. Therefore a "tax commutation payment" was determined, and the Jews of Frankfurt had to purchase their freedom with 440,000 gulden. The Israelitic Community nominated a committee of five men to handle the matter, one of them being Mayer Amschel. In addition Rothschild made the cash amounts that the Community was unable to procure available through the discounting of bills of exchange, including the second installment in the form of debentures with a term of ten years, a major tranche of which was handled by the Gebrüder Bethmann bank.[12]

Rothschilds profited from the upheavals and political developments from 1792 onward. Economic policy, the needs of the military, societal reforms and the development of private capitalism all led to a need for more money, so that the function of a banker as debt intermediary and money procurer became more pronounced. In addition religious tensions decreased, and thus also prejudice against the Jews.[13] However, the major advantage of Mayer Amschel and his sons was that they perceived new business areas quickly and were imformed quickly, accurately and comprehensively. This could only be done based on joint action in a framework of mutual trust, which required joint deliberations before each operation. Moreover Mayer Amschel himself had always been very mobile, traveling great distances in postal carriages with secret compartments.

The Freiherr finally notes the charity of Mayer Amschel Rothschild, who gave to the needy regardless of their creed and was prepared at any time to travel and walk on behalf of those requiring his assistance.[14]

Fritz Stern

Finally a quote from Fritz Stern, which shows that in 1852, the House of Bethmann was still strong enough to serve as a credible threat to the Rothschilds.

Simon Moritz von Bethmann, in his own words

Said with more than a little warmth, an indication of the exasperation Bethmann felt at being squeezed from two sides – his Christian fellows who resented him for working to remove their privileges vis-à-vis the Jews, and the Rothschilds in whom centuries of persecution had embedded suspicion and wariness.


Bethmann at his cool and collected best, dispassionately looking out for the common weal.

Conclusion

From all the sources, one does not get the impression that Bethmanns and Rothschilds were close friends. It also appears that the curiosity and appreciation the Bethmanns had for the Rothschilds were not reciprocated in equal measure. However, in the rough-and-tumble world of international finance, complicated further by the delicate state of Judeo-Christian relations and the heavy burden of history, it was an achievement that the keen rivals and (less frequently) gimlet-eyed business partners did manage, as far as can be told, to preserve something else always: more than just grudging admiration, a genuine respect for each other.


Notes

  1. ^ Preissler, pp.30-31.
  2. ^ Corti 2001, p.16
  3. ^ Corti 2001, p.263
  4. ^ A major part of the elector's fortune that he had his bankers invest deríved from the impressment and sale of Hessians to rulers who used them in military conflicts abroad.
  5. ^ J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.59.
  6. ^ a b c J.P. v. Bethmann quoting Simon Moritz von Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.60.
  7. ^ at least on paper; true equality was still a long way off
  8. ^ a b J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.61.
  9. ^ "Neither Bethmann nor Gontard was Jewish. Yet there is no question that, by the later eighteenth century, it was Jews who had come to be seen as the most enterprising operators when it came to money-changing and all kinds of lending. After more than a century of scholarly reflection on the subject, it is still hard to say quite why this was." Ferguson, ch.1.
  10. ^ J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.63
  11. ^ J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.64.
  12. ^ J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.66.
  13. ^ For a contrasting view, see Preissler.
  14. ^ J.P. v. Bethmann in Sarkowicz, p.68.
  15. ^ Stern 1979, p. 16.
  16. ^ Corti 2001, p.190
  17. ^ quoted in: Achterberg, p.38


External links

Niall Ferguson: The House of Rothschild, vol. 1. Table of contents and first chapter.

Bibliography

  • Claus Helbing: Die Bethmanns. Aus der Geschichte eines alten Handelshauses zu Frankfurt am Main. Gericke (publishers), Wiesbaden 1948.
  • Alexander Dietz: Frankfurter Handelsgeschichte, Glashütten 1971, reprint of 1925 edition
  • Egon Caesar Conte Corti: Rise of the House of Rothschild, B. Lunn (translator), Books for Business 2001 (reprint of 1928 translation published by Gollancz), ISBN 978-0894990588, Amazon.co.uk searchable online view
  • Erich Achterberg: Frankfurter Bankherren, 2nd revised edition. Fritz Knapp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1971. This book was published without an ISBN
  • Fritz Stern: Gold and Iron. Vintage, 1979, ISBN-13: 978-0394740348
  • Dietmar Preissler: Frühantisemitismus in der Freien Stadt Frankfurt und im Großherzogtum Hessen (1810-1860). Universitätsverlag Carl Winter, Heidelberg 1989, ISBN 3-533-04129-8
  • Wolfgang Klötzer (ed.): Frankfurter Biographie. Erster Band A-L. Verlag Waldemar Kramer (publishers), Frankfurt am Main 1994, ISBN 3-7829-0444-3
  • Hans Sarkowicz (ed.): Die großen Frankfurter, Frankfurt am Main and Leipzig, 1994, ISBN 3-458-16561-4
  • Carl-Ludwig Holtfrerich: Finanzplatz Frankfurt, Munich, 1999, ISBN 3-406-45184-5
  • Carl-Ludwig Holtfrerich: Frankfurt as a Financial Center: From Medieval Trade Fair to European Banking Centre, Munich, 1999, ISBN 3406456715, Google Books Preview
  • Niall Ferguson: The House of Rothschild. Volume 1, Money's Prophets: 1798-1848. Penguin, 1999, ISBN 978-0140240849