Felix Bondi

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Felix Eliyahu Bondi (born October 26, 1860 in Dresden ; died January 17, 1934 there ) was a German lawyer , notary and art collector.

Life

He was the son of the lawyer, banker and councilor Joseph Bondi (1818-1897) and his second wife Julie nee Gottschalk. Felix Bondi became a lawyer and notary in his hometown of Dresden. After his father's death in 1897, he became a partner in the Bondi & Maron banking house in Dresden.

Felix Bondi volunteered as a judge at the Franco-German Court of Arbitration in Paris . He was an associate editor of Staub's Practice of Financing 1929 and the 1932 Amendment. He has also written for several legal journals. He was also a member of several supervisory boards and was active as a charitable and patron in many areas . Felix Bondi belonged to the Saxon Art Association and the Dresden Art Cooperative and was a co-founder of the Dresden Museum Association. He was also known as an art collector. His collection was housed in Villa Comeniusstraße 33 and went through the bombing on 13/14 during the Nazi era . Mostly lost in February 1945 . Most recently he lived in Dresden- Weißer Hirsch , Niddastraße 9.

His tomb is in the urn grove in Dresden-Tolkewitz, Wehlener Straße.

family

He was married to Anna Engelmann from Ölmütz since 1890. Their son Herbert was killed in the First World War in 1914. They also had two other children. His daughter Sofie married Karl Isaak on May 29, 1923 in Vienna . Felix Bondi wrote the commemorative publication A cheerful book , which was published by Nathan Kaufmann in Frankfurt am Main .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heike Biedermann: Jewish collector and patron at the beginning of the 20th century in Dresden. In: Andrea Baresel-Brand, Peter Müller, Coordination Office for the Loss of Cultural Property (ed.): Collecting, donating, promoting. Jewish patrons in German society. Magdeburg 2008. pp. 101-125