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CONTENTS
Illustrations in the text...........................................xi
Tables.............................................................xiv
Acknowledgements....................................................xv
Family tree......................................................xviii
INTRODUCTI0N Reality and Myth........................................1
I Father and Sons
ONE "Our Blessed Father" Origins...............................35
TWO The Elector's Treasure......................................60
II Brothers
THREE "The Commanding General" (1813-1815).....................83
FOUR "A Court Always Leads to Something" (1816-1825)..........111
FIVE "Hue and Cry" (1826-1829)................................139
SIX Amschel's Garden...........................................164
SEVEN Barons...................................................190
EIGHT Sudden Revolutions (1830-1833)..........................210
NINE The Chains of Peace (1830-1833)..........................231
TEN The World's Bankers.......................................257
ELEVEN "Il est mort" (1836)...................................291
III Uncles and Nephews
TWELVE Love and Debt...........................................319
THIRTEEN Quicksilver and Hickory (1834-1839)..................354
F0URTEEN Between Retrenchment and Rearmament (1840)...........379
FIFTEEN "Satan Harnessed": Playing at Railways
(1830-1846)....................................................406
SIXTEEN 1848...................................................437
Appendix I: Prices and Purchasing Power............................481
Appendix II: Exchange Rates and Selected Financial Statistics......484
Source Notes.......................................................486
Bibliography.......................................................599
Index..............................................................627
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The House of Rothschild
Money's Prophets: 1798-1848
By Niall Ferguson
Viking
(C) 1998 Niall Ferguson
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 0-670-85768-8
Read BW's Review of This Book
CHAPTER ONE
Yes, my dear fellow, it all amounts to this: in order to do something
you must be something. We think Dante great, but he
had a civilisation of centuries behind him; the House of Rothschild
is rich but it has required more than one generation to
attain such wealth. Such things all lie deeper than one thinks.
--GOETHE, OCTOBER 1828
A traveller arriving in eighteenth-century Frankfurt, as he passed across the
main Sachsenhauser Bridge leading to the Fahrtor Gate, could hardly miss the
Judensau--the Jews' Sow (see illustration 1.i). An obscene graffito on
the wall, it depicted a group of Jews abasing themselves before--or rather
beneath and behind--a fierce sow. While one of them suckled at her teats,
another (in rabbinical garb) held up her tail for the third (also a rabbi) to
drink her excrement. The "Jews' devil" watched approvingly. If the traveller
looked up, he could also see a second and still more repellent image: that of
a dead baby, its outstretched body punctured by countless small knife wounds
and beneath it nine daggers. "On Maundy Thursday in the year 1475," read a
caption, "the little child Simeon, aged 2, was killed by the Jews"--an allusion
to the case of Simon of Trent, who had allegedly been a victim of "ritual
murder," the fictional practice whereby Jews murdered Gentile children in order
to put their blood in unleavened bread.
Such a graphic expression of anti-Jewish sentiment was by no means unique:
the image of Jews worshipping a pig can be found in numerous woodcut and printed
versions dating as far back as the fourteenth century, while the myth of ritual
murder gained currency in Germany in the fifteenth. What made the Frankfurt
pictures remarkable--at least in the eyes of the city's most celebrated son,
Johann Wolfgang Goethe--was that they were "not the product of private
hostility, but erected as a public monument." The Judensau and the
murdered child were officially sanctioned symbols of a long-standing tradition
of hostility to an enemy within the free imperial town.
The first records of a Jewish community in Frankfurt date back to the middle
of the twelfth century, when it numbered between one and two hundred. Its
history was one of periodic persecution by the Gentile populace. In 1241, more
than three quarters of the Frankfurt Jews were massacred in the so-called
"Battle of the Jews" (Judenschlacht). The community re-established
itself over the subsequent decades, but just over a century later, in 1349,
there was a second pogrom. In both cases, popular millenarianism played a part:
in the first "battle," fears that the Jews were in league with the Mongol
horde; in the second, fears instigated by members of a flagellant order that
the Jews would attract the plague to the town.
There were, however, worldly reasons why both the Holy Roman Emperor--who
declared the Jews "servi nostri et servi camerae nostri" in 1236--and the
municipal authorities were inclined to encourage Jewish settlement. The Jews
were a source of tax revenue and credit (given their exemption from the laws
prohibiting usury) who could be offered "protection" and restricted privileges
in return for hard cash. But protection and restriction went hand in hand. In
1458, at the order of the Emperor Frederick III, the Jews were confined to a
ghetto (from the Italian borghetto or suburb): a single, narrow street
on the north-eastern edge of the town at both ends of which gates were erected.
To the 110 Jews living in the town, this capitivity in what became known as
the Judengasse (Jews' Lane) suggested a "New Egypt." On the other hand, the
persistent risk of popular violence could give the ghetto the character of a
sanctuary. Allegations of ritual murder in 1504 and an attempt to declare the
Jews heretics five years later provided a reminder of the vulnerability of
the community's position, as did the conversion of the majority of the town's
population to Lutheranism in 1537, given the avowed hostility of Luther towards
the Jews. The Judengasse provided sanctuary of sorts in a perilous world; and
between 1542 and 1610 its population grew from around 400 to 1,380 (an
increase which was paralleled by Huguenot migration to Frankfurt from the
Netherlands). The economic and social tensions which coincided with--or were
caused by--these influxes culminated in yet another outbreak of popular
violence against the Jewish community: the "Fettmilch riots," named after
their shopkeeper leader Vincenz Fettmilch. However, wholesale looting of the
Judengasse was this time not accompanied by mass murder (the Jews were
expelled from the town) and, after a brief period of popular rule, imperial
troops quashed the insurrection. Fettmilch and the other leaders of the revolt
were hanged and the Jews marched back into the ghetto, their status as proteges
of the Emperor reaffirmed.
In practice, as before, "protection" meant extraordinarily tight regulation,
the details of which were set out by the Council in the Stattigkeit, a statute
which was read out each year in the main synagogue. Under its terms, which
remained in force until the very end of the eighteenth century, the Jewish
population was restricted to just 500 families; the number of weddings was
rationed to just twelve a year and the age of marriage fixed at twenty-five.
No more than two Jews from outside were allowed to settle in the ghetto each
year. Jews were prohibited from farming, or from dealing in weapons, spices,
wine and grain. They were forbidden to live outside the Judengasse and, until
1726, were obliged to wear distinctive insignia (two concentric yellow rings
for men and a striped veil for women) at all times. They were confined
to the ghetto every night, on Sundays and during Christian festivals; at other
times, they were forbidden to walk in the town more than two abreast. They were
barred from entering parks, inns, coffee houses and the promenades around the
town's picturesque walls; they were not even allowed near the town's ancient
cathedral; and had to enter the town hall by a back door. They were permitted
to visit the town market, but only during set hours, and were forbidden to
touch vegetables and fruit there. If he appeared in court, a Jew had to swear
a special oath which reminded all present of "the penalties and maledictions
which God imposed on the cursed Jews." If he heard the words "Jud, mach mores!"
("Jew, do your duty!") in the street, he was obliged--even if they were
uttered by a mere boy--to doff his hat and step to one side. And if he had
occasion to go outside Frankfurt--for which a special pass was required--he
paid double the amount of toll paid by a Gentile when entering the town. In
return for this supposed "protection," every Jew also paid a
poll (or "body") tax.
All this meant that the Frankfurt Jews spent most of their lives within the
high walls and gates of the Judengasse. Today virtually nothing remains of
this prison-cum-street. All but a couple of houses were demolished by the
Frankfurt authorities in the course of the nineteenth century, and what little
remained was flattened by American bombers in May 1944. However, the
foundations of a part of the old street have recently been excavated, and
these give at least a rough idea of the inordinately cramped conditions of
life in the ghetto. Curving from the Bornheimer Gate in the north towards the
Jewish cemetery in the south, it was just a quarter of a mile long and no more
than twelve feet wide--in places less than ten. Having originally
been designated a ghetto at a time when the Jewish population was little more
than a hundred, the lane was horribly overcrowded: by 1711 there were no fewer
than 3,024 people living there. Accommodating them all in such a small area
required a high degree of architectural ingenuity: houses were just eight feet
wide and had up to four storeys, and behind each row an additional row was
constructed. Fire was an inevitable hazard--indeed, all or part of the
Judengasse was destroyed by major conflagrations in 1711, 1721 and 1774. This
meant that life there was both dear and cheap: dear because the demand for
housing far outstripped the supply, so that a four-room house in the north of
the Judengasse cost as much as Goethe's father paid for his twenty-room mansion
in the Grosse Hirschgraben; cheap because lack of sanitation, light and fresh
air reduced life expectancy. In the 1780s it was estimated that average
mortality among Jews was 58 per cent higher than among Gentiles. A traveller in
1795 observed how "most of the people among the Frankfurt Jews, even those who
are in the blooming years of their life, look like the walking dead ... Their
deathly pale appearance sets them apart from all the other inhabitants in the
most depressing way." Later, after the walls around it had been partly
demolished, the Judengasse was to some extent romanticised by artists like
Anton Burger; indeed, it became something of a Victorian tourist attraction
(Charles Greville and George Eliot were among the English visitors). At the
time, it struck the young Goethe as a hellish slum:
The lack of space, the dirt, the throng of people, the disagreeable
accents of the voice--altogether, it made the most unpleasant impression,
even upon the passer-by who merely looked through the gate. It
was a long time before I dared to go in there alone, and I did not return
there readily when once I had escaped from that multitide of people, all
of them with something to hawk, all indefatigably buying or selling.
One who knew it more intimately was the poet Ludwig Borne, who (as Juda Low
Baruch) grew up there in the 1780s and 1790s. Looking back in anger rather than
nostalgia, he remembered a
long dark prison, into which the highly celebrated light of the eighteenth
century has not yet been able to penetrate ... Stretching ahead of
us lay an immeasurably long street, near us just enough room to reassure
us that we could turn around as soon as the wish overcame us. Over us
is no longer sky, which the sun needs in order to expand in his breadth;
one doesn't see sky, one sees only sunlight. An evil smell rises everywhere
around us, and the cloth that is supposed to shield us from infection
serves also to catch the tears of compassion or to hide the smile of
malice from the gaze of the watching Jews. Tramping laboriously
through the filth slows our pace down enough to permit us the leisure
for observation. We set our feet down skittishly and carefully so that we
don't step on any children. These swim about in the gutter, creep about
in the filth innumerable as vermin hatched by the sun from the
dungheap. Who would not indulge these little boys in their small
desires? ... If one were to consider play in childhood as the model for
the reality of life, then the cradle of these children must be the grave of
every encouragement, every exuberance, every friendship, every joy in
life. Are you afraid that these towering houses will collapse over us? O
fear nothing! They are thoroughly reinforced, the cages of clipped birds,
resting on the cornerstone of eternal ill-will, well walled up by the
industrious hands of greed, and mortared with the sweat of tortured
slaves. Do not hesitate. They stand firm and will never fall.
As Borne commented, even at a time of supposed "enlightenment," when other
German cities were relaxing the restrictions imposed on Jews, Frankfurt held
out, refusing to implement the Emperor Joseph II's Edict of Toleration (1782)
and confiscating copies of Ephraim Lessing's philo-Semitic play Nathan the
Wise. When the Jewish community petitioned in 1769 and again in 1784 to be
allowed to leave the ghetto on Sundays, the request was rejected as an attempt
"to put themselves on an equal footing with the Christian residents." As in
the past, this policy was to some extent forced upon the Council by the
majority of the Gentile townspeople. Typically, when a Jewish mathematics
teacher was granted permission to live and teach outside the ghetto in 1788,
there was such a popular outcry that the licence had to be revoked; and a
similar request by a Jewish doctor in 1795 was turned down flat. For much the
same reason--as a letter of complaint signed by seven leading Jewish
merchants makes clear--the rules governing travel outside the Judengasse on
holidays and Sundays were made more rather than less restrictive in 1787, with
the introduction of a complicated system of identity cards:
As a human being, every Jew has the same rights as any other and a just
claim for protection by his sovereign. Unfortunately, the lower classes
are still so bound to the prejudices of their fathers as to doubt that a Jew
is a human being like themselves. They mistreat [the Jews] in all sorts of
ways and many an old man seems pleased when his son is mistreating a
Jew. Even soldiers indulge in this punishable tyranny. Would they not
take [the new system] as an invitation for countless acts of harassment?
They would use the smallest difference in clothing, hair, beards and the
like as an excuse to perform the most stringent examinations at the town
gate. The slightest deviation [would] enable them to arrest the Jew and
march him off to the main guard house like a common thief.
There was more to this persistent and systematic discrimination than mere
ancestral prejudice, however. An important factor was that the Gentile business
community genuinely feared the economic challenge which they believed would be
posed by an emancipated Jewish population. The fact that a slum like the
Judengasse could produce mathematics teachers and doctors in itself tells us
something important about its culture: it was not as closed as it seemed. As
Goethe himself discovered, when he plucked up the courage to enter the ghetto,
the Jews were "human beings after all, industrious and obliging, and one could
not help but admire even the obstinacy with which they adhered to their
traditional ways." Despite--perhaps partly because of--the grim conditions in
which they lived, the Frankfurt Jews were anything but an underclass in
cultural terms.
Of course, the culture of the Judengasse was an unfamiliar one to a Gentile
like Goethe. It was an intensely religious culture, with the rhythm of life
still dictated by the religious laws of the Halakha. Every morning and
evening, men were summoned to worship at synagogue by the Schul-Klopper
knocking on their doors with a hammer. The Sabbath was, as an English visitor
recalled, "in the picturesque phrase of their prayer-book, `a bride,' and her
welcome, week by week, was of a right bridal sort. White cloths were spread and
lamps lit in her honour. The shabbiest dwellings put on something of a festive
air." Education at the lane's three primary schools (heder) and the
rabbinical college (yeshivah) was, by the standards of the time, conservative,
with children learning to read the Torah, the foundation of Mosaic teaching law,
then moving on to Rashi's commentaries and finally the Talmud, the compilation
of rabbinical commentaries and debates on rules of observance. The community
had its own fire brigade and hospitals, its own cemetery and its own voluntary
associations to provide for the poor.
Yet, despite the high walls which surrounded it, and despite the relatively
limited impact of the Jewish Enlightenment on the community (as compared with
that of Berlin), the culture of the Judengasse was far from insular. Although
Gentiles sometimes sneered at their manner of speech, Heinrich Heine later
insisted that the Frankfurt Jews spoke "nothing but the proper language of
Frankfurt [which is] spoken with equal excellence by the circumcised as well
as by the non-circumcised population." This was a slight, though pardonable,
exaggeration. Those Jews who did manage to secure for themselves a secular as
well as a religious education--like the doctor mentioned above--would have
spoken, read and written Hochdeutsch. The surviving letters of Mayer
Amschel Rothschild, however, confirm that his was a rough and often
ungrammatical German, with an admixture of Hebrew; and when he wrote to his
sons he used Hebrew characters, as did they when they wrote to one another.
Nevertheless, the Judendeutsch of the Judengasse was not the Yiddish of
the Polish and Russian stetl; and in all probability many Gentile merchants in
Frankfurt wrote ungrammatical letters too. When Frankfurt Jews left the
Judengasse to do business--the avenue of activity most accessible to them--there
was no insuperable language barrier between them and the Gentile merchants
they encountered.
More than most German towns in the eighteenth century, Frankfurt was a
businessman's town. At the junction of several major trade routes linking the
towns of South Germany (Strasbourg, Ulm, Augsburg and Nuremberg) to the
Hanseatic ports of the North (Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck), and linking Germany
as a whole to the economies of the Atlantic seaboard, the Baltic and the Near
East, its prosperity was bound up with the two annual fairs in the autumn and
the spring which had been held in the town since the Middle Ages. And because
of the enormous variety of coinage circulating in Europe up until the late
nineteenth century, the town's commerce necessarily went hand in hand with
banking: in particular, money-changing and bill-broking (buying and selling the
IOUs generated by more complex transactions). In addition--and in some ways
more importantly--Frankfurt acted as a financial centre for the princes,
archdukes and electors who governed the numerous petty territories of the
region. The revenues from their lands and subjects (rents, taxes and so on) and
the expenditures of their courts (on grand residences, gardens and
entertainments) made these rulers the biggest customers of the pre-industrial
German economy, even if most of them were considerably less well off than their
counterparts in the English aristocracy. In particular, the fact that the
majority generally spent more than they earned created lucrative if sometimes
risky opportunities for German bankers.
Perhaps the most successful firm in this field prior to 1800 was that of
Simon Moritz and Johann Philipp Bethmann, who imported from Amsterdam to Germany
the system of "sub-bonds" (Partialobligationen) whereby a large loan
could be subdivided into more manageable portions and sold on to a wide
clientele of investors. A typical transaction was the Bethmann Brothers' loan
to the Holy Roman Emperor of 20,000 gulden (around 2,000 [pounds sterling]) in
1778, which they sold on to investors in the form of twenty 1,000-gulden bonds,
handing over the cash thus raised--minus their substantial commission--to the
imperial Treasury in Vienna, and subsequently ensuring the prompt payment of
interest from Vienna to the bondholders. Between 1754 and 1778 the Bethmanns
floated loans totalling nearly 2 million gulden, and no fewer than fifty-four
separate loans totalling nearly 30 million gulden in the following five years.
Other Frankfurt bankers became involved in the same kind of
business, notably Jakob Friedrich Gontard.
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. Any advantage Jews enjoyed over Gentile
financiers can have been only an indirect result of their system of education:
Mayer Amschel Rothschild once recalled that "in my youth I was ... a very
active merchant, but I was disorganised, because I had been a student [of the
Talmud] and learnt nothing [about business]." Probably membership of a tightly
knit "outsider" group helped when it came to constructing credit networks. And
perhaps there was a kind of business ethic derived from Judaism. But these
points can be made with equal force about other religious minorities, as they
were by Max Weber, who unconvincingly contrasted "the Protestant ethic" with
the Jewish ethos of "politically and speculatively oriented ... pariah
capitalism." The least unsatisfactory answer is that, at a time when most
fields of economic activity were closed to them, Jews had little alternative
but to concentrate on commerce and finance. At the same time, their Gentile
rivals in these fields probably tended to exaggerate the extent of the "Jewish
threat" to their business. The non-Jewish bankers of Frankfurt were
complaining as early as 1685 that "the Jews had torn the bills trade from
their hands"--a claim which led to a ban on Jews entering the stock exchange.
Twelve years later the Council was trying, not for the last time, to prevent
Jews from renting warehouses in the Fahrgasse, the town's main street.
Perhaps the most notorious conflict of this sort centred around the role of
Joseph Stiss-Oppenheimer, who rose from being Hoffaktor (court agent)
to Duke Karl Alexander of Wurttemberg to the much more political posts of privy
councillor and, in 1733, envoy in Frankfurt, where his privileged position
allowed him to live outside the Judengasse in the comfort of the Golden Swan
Inn. Four years later Oppenheimer was executed, having been found guilty of
wielding excessive political power and undermining the position of the
Wurttemberg estates (Stande). Oppenheimer--the Jud Suss of
later anti-Semitic legend--was only the most notorious of the Jewish court
agents, however. By the mid-eighteenth century Frankfurt Jews were acting as
agents for the Palatinate, the Electorate of Mainz, the Grand Duchy of
Hesse-Darmstadt, the Kingdom of Prussia, the imperial court in Vienna, as well
as Hesse-Kassel and Saxe-Weimar. Low Beer Isaak, for example, was court agent
to the Prince of Nassau-Saarbrucken in 1755, while David Meyer Kupl challenged
the dominance of the Kann family when he became imperial court agent at around
the same time. Such men formed a rich and privileged elite within the
Judengasse.
Mayer Amschel
It was into this partly, but not wholly, segregated world that Mayer Amschel
Rothschild was born in either 1743 or 1744. About his parents, grandparents and
more remote ancestors we know little. Benjamin Franklin once observed that in
life only death and taxes are inevitable; they are also virtually the only
things about which records survive for the earliest Rothschilds. It is worth
noting at once that the family might never have been called
"Rothschild"--literally "red shield"--at all. We know that Isak, son of
Elchanan, built a house in the 1560s known as "zum roten Schild" ("the red
shield"), presumably after some kind of shield of the sort often hung at the
front of houses. It was common enough for residents of the Judengasse to become
known by their addresses. However, Isak's grandson Naftali Herz (who died in
1685) left the house with the red shield and moved to another house, "zur
Hinterpfann" ("the warming pan"). The Rothschilds could thus conceivably have
become known as the "Hinterpfanns." As it was, although Naftali Herz's son,
grandson and great-grandson continued to use the name "Rothschild," they also
used the name "Bauer." It was probably only in the next generation--Mayer
Amschel's--that the name Rothschild stuck firmly as a surname, though even he
might possibly have changed it again when he moved to another house known as
"zum grunen Schild" ("the green shield").
The most we can say about the early Rothschilds is that they were pious and
relatively successful small businessmen dealing in, among other things, cloth.
Five years before his death in 1585, Isak zum roten Schild had a taxable income
of 2,700 gulden, and when he died he was remembered on his gravestone for his
"virtue," "righteousness" and "honesty." A century later his great-grandson
Kalman, a moneychanger who also dealt in wool and silk, had a taxable income
more than twice as large; and it seems that his son--Mayer Amschel's
grandfather Moses--successfully developed his father's business, continuing the
process of steady social ascent by marrying, successively, the daughters of a
tax collector and of a doctor. Unfortunately, we know next to nothing about the
economic achievements of Mayer Amschel's father, Amschel Moses--though the fact
that the family continued to live in the modest house at the Hinterpfann, with
its ground-floor office, its first-floor kitchen and cramped bedrooms above,
suggests at best consolidation, at worst stagnation. To judge by the lengthy
and fulsome praise on his gravestone inscription, the family had done no more
than attain solid respectability within the ghetto by the time he died.
Amschel Moses was evidently a studious man--he was, according to his
gravestone, "a man who observed the prescribed time for the study of the
Torah." This may possibly explain why he sent his son Mayer Amschel away to the
rabbinical school at Furth when he had completed his primary education in
Frankfurt. Whatever his reasons, it is not the case (as some historians have
erroneously inferred) that Mayer Amschel was intended for the rabbinate; Cohen,
who wrote a brief and laudatory biography shortly after Mayer Amschel's death
and probably knew him, states that he only "studied his religion in order ...
to be a good Jew." However, Mayer Amschel's studies at Furth were cut short by
the untimely death of his parents in 1755 and 1756, victims of one of the
epidemics which still periodically swept through German towns. He was just
twelve years old.
At this point, he might well have returned to rejoin his elder sister,
Gutelche, and two brothers, Moses and Kalman. Instead, he was sent to Hanover
to learn the rudiments of business in the firm of Wolf Jakob Oppenheim
(presumably a business associate of his father's). This was a formative
experience, because it brought him for the first time into direct contact with
the privileged world of the court agents. Of course, Mayer Amschel almost
certainly knew something of this world already. Suss-Oppenheimer, after all,
had been executed just six years before he was born. Moreover, we know that
Suss had been involved in at least one bills transaction with Mayer Amschel's
grandfather. But now the boy could see at closer quarters what it meant to be a
"court Jew," since Oppenheim's grandfather Samuel had been court agent to the
Austrian Emperor, and his uncle was agent to the Bishop of Cologne. It was in
Hanover that Mayer Amschel began to acquire an expertise which was calculated
to help him acquire the status of court agent for himself. He became a dealer
in rare coins and medals, a line of business in which clients were almost
invariably aristocratic collectors, and in which a knowledge of Samuel Maddai's
complex system of numismatic classification was indispensable.
When he returned to Frankfurt--as he was obliged by residence laws to do when
his apprenticeship ended--in around 1764, Mayer Amschel was quick to put this
expertise to good use. Within a year of his return, he had succeeded in selling
rare medals to a well-born client whose future importance to the Rothschilds
was to be considerable. Admittedly, Mayer Amschel's first transaction with
William, Hereditary Prince of Hesse-Kassel, was small beer. Assuming that he
was the "Jew Meyer" referred to in Williams Privy Purse accounts for June 1765,
it involved nothing more than 38 gulden and 30 kreuzers--a trifling sum, and
one of many such small purchases the Prince made from various dealers in the
years after 1763, as he built up his fashionable collection of medals and
coins. Nevertheless, this--along with "various deliveries" of which no record
survives--was enough to justify a request in 1769 that Mayer Amschel be granted
the title of court agent, a request which was duly granted in September of that
year. A year later he consolidated this new status. In August 1770 (at the age
of twenty-six) he married Gutle, the sixteen-year-old daughter of Wolf Salomon
Schnapper, court agent to the Prince of Saxe-Meiningen. In addition to the
benefits of association with her father, the match brought Mayer Amschel vital
new capital, in the form of a dowry of 2,400 gulden. It was to prove the first
of a succession of carefully calculated Rothschild marriages, laying a
foundation of prosperous kinship every bit as important as the foundation of
royal patronage represented by the title of court agent.
In the years which followed, Mayer Amschel--initially in partnership with his
brother Kalman, before the latter's death in 1782--successfully established
himself as Frankfurt's leading dealer not only in coins and medals, but also in
all kinds of antiques. We can see how he operated from the meticulous
catalogues he circulated to his widening circle of aristocratic customers. By
the 1780s the items listed included ancient Greek and Roman as well as German
coins, and also a variety of other antiques and "curiosities" of the sort a
wealthy collector might display alongside his coin collection: carved figures,
precious stones and the like. The total value of the goods for sale in each
catalogue varied from around 2,500 gulden to 5,000 gulden; however, if an item
interested a client, Mayer Amschel would send it for inspection and then, if
the customer wished to make a purchase, negotiate a selling price, often some
way below the guide price in the catalogue. According to the surviving Privy
Purse accounts, Prince William did not become a regular customer until 1790,
after which date he made purchases almost every year. Other clients included
Goethe's patron, the Duke of Weimar.
That the basis of the Rothschilds' fortune was mail-order antique sales to
aristocratic numismatists may seem surprising; but there is no question that
without the capital Mayer Amschel was able to accumulate by buying and selling
"curiosities," he would never have had the resources to move into banking. It
is not immediately obvious how successful he was as an antique dealer: his
property tax assessment remained a constant 2,000 gulden between 1773 and 1794.
However, the Maaserbuch or Zehentbuch in which he punctiliously
recorded his charitable donations (a tenth of his annual income, according to
Jewish law) suggested to his later biographer Berghoeffer that Mayer Amschel's
annual income in the 1770s must have been in the region of 2,400
gulden--roughly the same as that of the Goethe family, and rather more than was
earned at the time by a local official like a tax assessor
(Schultheiss). On the basis of these and other available figures,
Berghoeffer estimated Mayer Amschel's total wealth in the mid-1780s at around
150,000 gulden (around 15,000 [pounds sterling]).
We also know that Mayer Amschel was rich enough to move house in 1787.
Shortly after returning to Frankfurt, he and and his two brothers had acquired
complete ownership of the Hinterpfann house, buying out the distant relations
with whom their parents had shared it. Now, some twenty years later, Mayer
Amschel sold his three-eighths share of the Hinterpfann to his brother Moses
(for 3,300 gulden) and, beginning in 1783, bought a substantially larger house,
"zum grunen Schild" ("the green shield"), for more than 11,000 gulden. By the
standards of a Gentile family like the Goethes, this was still a wretchedly
cramped place to live: just fourteen feet wide, with rooms so narrow that beds
could be placed only along the side-walls at right angles to the street. It was
wretched by the standards of the next generation of Rothschilds too: Mayer
Amschel's sons would look back without nostalgia on the days "when we all slept
in one little attic room." But by the standards of the Judengasse it was a
desirable residence. Located in the middle of the street--roughly opposite the
middle, western gate--it had been rebuilt after the 1711 fire and, unusually,
had its own waterpump. On each of the three upper storeys of the main building
there was a narrow room looking over the street--each with three small windows,
a stove and wall cupboard--and a similar room looking inwards over the yard.
Through the back door, there was a little courtyard with a small two-storey
building, part of which housed the single lavatory. Unusually (and usefully)
the house had two cellars, one of which was reached through an obvious enough
trapdoor in the entrance hall, and the other--a larger cellar which the house
shared with its next-door neighbour which was accessible only through a
concealed opening underneath the stairs, and was unconnected to the other
cellar. The new space above the ground, limited though it may have been, was
needed; for Mayer Amschel and his wife were proving to be a remarkably
procreative couple, even by late-eighteenth-century standards. It appears that
Gutle Rothschild gave birth virtually every year between 1771, the year after
her marriage, and 1792. Of these nineteen or so children, ten lived: Schonche
(1771), Amschel Mayer (1773), Salomon Mayer (1774), Nathan Mayer (1777),
Isabella or Betty (1781), Breunle or Babette (1784), Kalman or Carl (1788),
Gotton or Julie (1790), Jettchen or Henrietta (1791) and Jakob or James (1792).
It was only after the birth of his youngest child that Mayer Amschel began to
engage in business which can properly be called banking. In some ways, the
transition was a natural one. An antique-dealer with a growing circle of
suppliers and customers naturally would extend credit to some of these from
time to time. As early as 1790 we find Mayer Amschel listed as one of the
creditors of Joseph Cassel in the nearby town of Deutz, albeit for a mere 365
gulden. In a similar way, the coin and medal business inevitably brought him
into contact with the Hessian mint, especially as his most coveted client,
Prince William, often commissioned new medals to be struck. In 1794, for
example, Rothschild offered to sell a quantity of silver to the Hessian war
treasury "at the best possible price."
However, the speed with which Mayer Amschel's wealth grew in the 1790s
marked a real break with his earlier business activity. At the beginning of the
1790s Mayer Amschel Rothschild was no more than a prosperous antique-dealer. By
1797 he was one of the richest Jews in Frankfurt, and a central part of his
business was unmistakably banking. The evidence for this breakthrough is
unequivocal. In 1795 the official figure for Mayer Amschel's taxable wealth was
doubled to 4,000 gulden; a year later he was moved into the top tax bracket,
with property worth more than 15,000 gulden; and in the same year he was listed
as the tenth richest man in the Judengasse with taxable wealth of over 60,000
gulden. Thanks largely to Mayer Amschel, the Rothschilds had become one of the
eleven richest families in the Judengasse by 1800. It was at around the same
time that he began to rent a large four-roomed warehouse outside the
Judengasse. He also took on a talented and multilingual accountant from Bingen
named Seligmann Geisenheimer. Further evidence of increased wealth can be found
in the generous dowries Mayer Amschel was able to give his children as they
began to marry. When his eldest daughter married Benedikt Moses Worms in 1795,
she received a dowry of 5,000 gulden and was promised a legacy of 10,000 after
her parents' deaths. When his eldest son married Eva Hanau the following year,
he was given a share of the business worth 30,000 gulden.
Just what such a share meant can be seen from one of the most important
documents to have been found in the recently opened Moscow "trophy" archive:
the first known balance sheet of Mayer Amschel Rothschild's firm, dating back
over 200 years to the summer of 1797. The total assets of the firm at this
stage were given as 471,221 Reichsthaler or 843,485 gulden, the total
liabilities as 734,981 gulden, leaving 108,504 gulden (around 10,000 [pounds
sterling]) as--in Mayer Amschel's own words--"the balance of my capital, praise
God" ("Saldo meines Vermogens, Gott lob"). This remarkable document repays
close scrutiny, for it reveals that Mayer Amschel was already far more of an
international merchant banker than has previously been realised. The "assets"
side of the balance-sheet evidently excluded Mayer Amschel's personal property,
in that the family house does not appear there: by "my capital" he already
meant his firm's capital. Most of the assets listed were either state bonds of
various sorts, or personal loans and credits to a widely dispersed range of
other firms. On the other side, the liabilities consisted of sums owed by Mayer
Amschel to an equally broad spectrum of institutions and individuals.
The geographical range of Mayer Amschel's business credit network at this
early stage was wide. The balance sheet shows that he was doing business with
firms located not only in the immediate vicinity of Frankfurt (for example, in
Kassel and Hanau) but also in more remote parts of Germany, ranging from
Hamburg and Bremen to Regensburg, Augsburg, Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna, as well
as in Amsterdam, Paris and London. Moreover, in addition to the names which
might have been expected to feature in such a list of creditors and debtors
(such as Mayer Amschel's son-in-law Worms and his future son-in-law Sichel),
there appear the names of a number of eminent Gentile firms, including the
Bethmanns, de Neufvilles and Brentanos (whom he owed a good deal of money). The
celebrated art-collector Johann Friedrich Stadel also had deposits with
Rothschild totalling 17,600 gulden. Finally, the balance sheet provides
evidence of a new kind of relationship with the government of Hesse-Kassel,
which he owed some 24,093 gulden. It is not without significance that the names
of two Hessian officials--Louis Harnier and Karl Buderus--appear in their own
right as creditors.
This was a rapid economic ascent by any standards. Indeed, Mayer Amschel's
success had been so swift and so great that it had to some extent outstripped
his own capacities. In 1797 he was appalled to discover that one of his most
junior employees--a youth named Hirsch Liebmann--had been able to embezzle a
substantial sum virtually from under his nose. The proceedings of the
subsequent criminal case have partially survived and give a good insight into
the chaotic state of his rapidly expanding business at this period. According
to Mayer Amschel, Liebmann, who had been with the firm some three years, had
stolen between 1,500 and 2,000 gold carolins (as much as 30,000 gulden) from
his office. The theft had been possible for three reasons. Firstly, Mayer
Amschel allowed Liebmann to buy and sell goods on his own account to supplement
his meagre wages--one and a half gulden a month after the rent of a shared
room. Indeed, Rothschild even lent him a small sum on one occasion to help
finance this. No one was therefore surprised when Liebmann appeared to be
supplementing his wages, even if he was doing so with singular success.
Secondly, the firm had no safe for valuables and scarcely any office security:
the cupboard in the main office was frequently left open during business hours
and employees and clients seem to have come and gone as they pleased. No one
therefore noticed when coins, notes and other valuables began to disappear. And
thirdly, Mayer Amschel's system of book-keeping was woefully primitive: when he
came to lay charges against Liebmann, he had virtually no documents to prove
how much had been stolen. No one therefore realised that money was missing
until some time after Liebmann had begun stealing. It was only when a local
broker appeared in the office, claiming that Liebmann wished to buy seed from
him, that Mayer Amschel's suspicions were aroused. When pressed, the man
admitted that this was a cover story suggested by Liebmann; in fact, he was
there to buy an Austrian bill worth around 1,220 gulden which Liebmann had
offered to sell him. Mayer Amschel belatedly grasped where his employee had
been getting the money for his gold watches and handmade shirts. Further
enquiries confirmed his suspicions: Liebmann had not only been spending money
on himself, but also sending it to his parents in Bockenheim, who were
notoriously "as poor as could be" but who suddenly seemed able to afford a 500
gulden dowry for Liebmann's sister. When the thief was arrested, eight thaler
coins and an imperial treasury note were found among his possessions, as well
as some silver spoons, a gold salt pot, a gold mug and seven medals, belying
his protestations of innocence. Further proof of guilt was unwittingly provided
by Liebmann's own father, who offered to return 1,000 gulden which his son had
given him plus an additional 500 if Rothschild would drop his charges.
Eventually, though only after prolonged interrogation, Liebmann confessed.
Liebmann gave conflicting accounts of the theft, at one point saying that he
took the money in small amounts over a prolonged period, later claiming that he
had simply snatched two sacks of coins from the office cupboard while Mayer
Amschel's second son, Salomon, was talking with some clients. Either way, the
case illustrates that by 1797 at the latest the business was turning over so
much cash that Rothschild himself could not keep track of it: bags of money
were lying around the office, as he himself told the court, some in the
cupboard, some on the floor. He always had a lot of money in his house, he
said, because of his "extensive business dealings." The subsequent decade would
see those dealings become more extensive still.
The Dual Revolution
In his Biographical Notes on the House of Rothschild, written long
after Mayer Amschel's death, Friedrich yon Gentz fulsomely praised his business
acumen. "Nevertheless," he added wisely, "the most outstanding personal
qualities may sometimes require exceptional circumstances and world-shattering
events to come to fruition." This was doubly true.
The epoch-making events which followed the summoning of the French Estates
General by Louis XVI in 1789 took time to affect the lives of German Jews like
Mayer Amschel Rothschild and his family. But when finally the Revolution reached
Frankfurt, its effects were profound--indeed, literally explosive. The advance
guard came as early as October 1792, when French troops temporarily occupied
Frankfurt, just ten weeks after the coronation of the last Holy Roman Emperor,
Francis II. We should not, of course, exaggerate the significance of this
superficially symbolic change of regime. Frankfurt had been occupied by French
troops before (during the Seven Years' War) and it seems that the Jewish
community was no more pleased than the rest of the town's population at this
renewed foreign incursion. Indeed, for all the potential benefits of French
influence which could be inferred from the National Assembly's emancipation of
French Jewry in 1791, the immediate, tangible effects of the French presence
were distinctly negative. In June 1796, following the defeat of the Austrian
army at Lodi, Frankfurt was bombarded by the victorious French forces so
heavily that nearly half the houses in the Judengasse were destroyed by fire.
On the other hand, the upheaval of war had its advantages. The destruction of
the Judengasse obliged the Frankfurt Senate to relax its residence
restrictions, granting permits (albeit for only six months) to the 2,000 or so
people left homeless by the fire to live outside the Judengasse. It was
presumably in the wake of this relaxation that Mayer Amschel was able to begin
renting the warehouse in the Schnurgasse. Later French incursions led to a
real, if temporary, improvement in the legal status of the Frankfurt Jews, an
improvement foreshadowed by the emancipation of the Jews in those parts of the
Rhineland which the French now annexed. (One beneficiary of this was
Geisenheimer, the man Mayer Amschel hired as his bookkeeper.) Of more immediate
importance, the war presented Mayer Amschel with a new and lucrative business
opportunity. He and two other partners, Wolf Loeb Schott and Beer Nehm
Rindskopf, were able to secure a contract to provide the Austrian army with
grain and cash during their operations in the Rhine-Main region.
The French Revolution was not the only revolution to transform Mayer
Amschers life and business. The British Industrial Revolution, in its first
phase by the 1780s if not before, exerted an equally important influence. For
although Mayer Amschel had already begun building up his banking business by
the late 1790s, this did not imply a winding up of his previous coin-dealing
business, which continued in a small way even after his death; and nor did it
preclude expansion into other potentially profitable fields of business
activity. Of these, none was more profitable in the late eighteenth century
than that generated by the English revolution in textile manufacturing. In
particular, the dramatic growth of (partly) mechanised cotton spinning, weaving
and dyeing in Lancashire signalled an unprecedented and genuinely revolutionary
change in the pace of economic life. Although this industrialisation was
regionally as well as sectorally concentrated--so much so that it barely
registers in the aggregate national income figures extrapolated by modern
economic historians--its ramifications were felt as far as Africa, whence the
slave labour of the cotton plantations came, America, where the cotton itself
was grown, and India, where an established native textile industry was soon to
face lethal competition from the cottages and mills of Lancashire and
Lanarkshire. Those mills exerted a powerful pull in Germany too, where demand
for the cheaper yet better British cloths--shawls, handkerchiefs, checks,
gauzes, muslins, muslinettes, quiltings, dimities, velveteens, sallampores and
jaconets--grew rapidly in the 1790s. Mayer Amschel was only one of many German
businessmen to scent a unique and highly profitable opportunity. Around fifteen
Jewish firms in Frankfurt alone were importing English textiles by the turn of
the century, and a number of these established permanent agents in Britain at
around this time. Between 1799 and 1803 no fewer than eight German merchants
settled in Manchester for this purpose.
It is against this background that we must see the decision to send Nathan,
the third of the Rothschild brothers, to England at some point on the eve of
the new century. The date of his departure from Frankfurt and the reasons for
his going have long been a source of confusion to historians. Although some
have Nathan arriving in England in 1797, 1799 or 1800, the majority opt for
1798. There is little evidence to support this last date. We know from the
balance sheet discussed above that Mayer Amschel had begun to have dealings
with firms in London from at least as early as 1797, but on a fairly limited
scale. It was only February 1800--the date of his first letter to the London
bankers Harman & Co., requesting that he be permitted to draw on them--that he
began to expand his English business. The first documentary evidence of
Nathan's presence in England comes from 1800 too. Wolf cites a letter from
Nathan dated May 29 in which he requests an acquaintance to reserve "a room
with two beds in it, in some respectable lodging house" for himself and his
"business manager." We also have a letter from Mayer Amschel to Harman, dated
June 15, which mentions that Nathan would "soon be at your place," and a letter
from Nathan dated August 15 from a London address (37 Cornhill). From this
Williams concluded that Nathan had actually arrived in England in 1800, spent
the summer in London, then proceeded to Manchester. But this cannot be right.
Not only was Nathan's first letter to Harman addressed from Manchester;
we also have several later letters in which Nathan explicitly states that he
had first come to Manchester the year before, 1799. It therefore seems
reasonable to conclude that Nathan did not arrive in Manchester before 1799,
though he and his father were not doing English business on a large scale until
the following year. This leaves the possibility--though it is nothing
more--that Nathan first crossed the Channel in 1798, staying in London for some
months before proceeding northwards.
Why did Nathan go to England? In the absence of hard evidence, most
historians have followed Nathan's own account of his emigration--which he
related to the MP Thomas Fowell Buxton in 1834--in which he portrayed the
decision to leave as his own:
"There was not," he said, "room enough for all of us in that city. I dealt
in English goods. One great trader came there who had the market to
himself: he was quite the great man, and did us a favour if he sold us
goods. Somehow I offended him, and he refused to show me his patterns.
This was on a Tuesday; I said to my father, "I will go to England."
I could speak nothing but German. On the Thursday I started ..."
There is no reason to think that this version of events was wholly fictitious.
Nathan was a fiercely ambitious and competitive man, as quick to take offence
as to give it in his business dealings, and it is not difficult to imagine him
responding impetuously to such a contretemps. However, in a number of respects
his retrospective account was misleading. Perhaps he could not resist
romanticising his own rags-to-riches story; perhaps he was indulging in irony
for the benefit of his after-dinner audience (the latter would have been more
in character). In any event, it seems highly unlikely that his father would, or
indeed could, have entrusted him with as large a sum of money as he suggested
to Buxton--20,000 [pounds sterling], or roughly double the net assets shown in
the 1797 balance sheet--on the strength of a youthful impulse. However much
"start-up" capital Nathan took with him, the idea that he was doing much more
than following his father's orders seems unlikely.
For political reasons, it soon became imperative to conceal the fact that
Nathan was acting as the agent of a Frankfurt firm, and this has led some
historians to assert that, once he arrived in England, he effectively operated
independently from his father and brothers. But the evidence in the firm's
archives for this period is unequivocal: initially, Nathan took his orders from
Frankfurt--indeed, his elder brother Salomon was sent over to assist him in
1801--and it was only gradually that he began to trade on his own account. A
number of Nathan's earliest letters from London and Manchester are signed "pp.
Meyer Amschel Rothschild." Correspondence between father and son was evidently
regular (though very little of it has survived), and Nathan wrote frequently on
his father's behalf to the London firms of Salomon Salomons and Harman & Co.,
which handled the firm's insurance and banking business in London. It was not
untypical for letters of this early period to begin with phrases like "My
father wishes me to write to you" or "Agreeable to the direction I have just
received from my father." On one occasion when a firm let him down, Nathan
warned them that if there were more "complaints of this nature ... [I] am
certain my father will order me to turn myself to somebody that will attend
more punctually." On another, he informed Salomons: "I received letters from
home this morn[in]g advis[in]g me of my father being very discontented w[ith]
your packing, writing that I must not send any more goods to London as you have
neglected the shipping." And for most of this period the chests of cloth which
Nathan was sending to the continent in increasing quantities all bore the
insignia "MAR" for Mayer Amschel Rothschild. Nathan was not sparing his father
anxiety when he concealed a brief illness from him in the summer of 1802.
Rather, he did not want his father to think he had been unable--for whatever
reason--to attend to business. In a letter to a recalcitrant French customer
not long after this illness, Nathan left for posterity a revealing insight into
his father's character, and his own view of it: "Do you think that my Father
will sell ... Goods upon his own bills ... without Profit? You are quite
mistaken, my father's Chimney will not smoke without profit." Just ten days
later he received a stern letter from his father accusing him of not keeping
"regular" accounts.
Nathan's slapdash approach to paperwork was evidently a recurrent source of
friction. Three years after this first admonition on the subject, Mayer Amschel
was still harping on the same theme, in a way which makes it abundantly obvious
where power lay in their relationship. This rare letter--one of the few of
Mayer Amschel's private letters which survive--is worth quoting at some length
to give a flavour of the early Rothschild correspondence:
[T]o begin with, all our correspondents complain about you, dear
Nathan, and say that you are so disorganised when sending consignments.
Sometimes you write that you have sent, for example, the chest
with this number, then later [it arrives with] another number. If you
send a chest today, you only let Esriel Reiss know six months after. One
of his clerks said to me that you are very disorganised. My dear friend, if
you don't write down all the numbers of the chests when you send them
off, if you don't write them down until you receive acknowledgement
that they have arrived, if you don't pay attention, if you [don't] ask
where the chest has gone when you don't receive an answer from your
correspondent, if you are so disorganised and don't have someone or a
friend with you, then you will be swindled. What is the good of that[?]
Everyone can be a millionaire if they get the [right] opportunity. I
already complained in Frankfurt about your extraordinary expenditures
and disorganisation, dear Nathan; I don't like it.
This repetitive, haranguing style--which was inherited by Mayer Amschel's elder
sons Amschel and Salomon--does not make for easy reading today; it cannot have
given Nathan much pleasure either. However, the father's determination to
bludgeon his son into mending his ways provides a fascinating insight into the
business methods of the day:
I have seen the orderly way in which Heckscher and the merchant
Baresch despatch and return consignments. They have special clerks in
order to keep an eye on everything. They say that without good order a
millionaire can go broke the more business he does, because the whole
world is not, or not very, honest. When people see that you are not
orderly in your despatching, they will do business with you only in order
to cheat you ... Mostly they will pick quarrels with you in order to
cheat you, the more so when they see how disorganised you are with
your consignments. In sum, they will do business with you to exploit
your disorganisation. There was a man in Frankfurt called Eluzer Elfelt
who made a great deal of money, but the whole world made money
from him because he was so disorganised and it went as badly for him in
the end as he himself had been badly organised. Dear Nathan, don't be
angry with your father. When it comes to penmanship you are not
much good. Take on a clerk to manage the despatching of consignments
and take my advice, be more organised with your despatching, otherwise
I don't give your business much chance. The more you sell the
worse it will get if you aren't organised. My dear son, don't be cross that
I write like this ... You have to be careful, and Amschel says that you
don't keep a proper record when he sends you remittances. That is
wrong ... It really is necessary that you keep a precise record of everything
that you send us and all that we send you, you really must keep
your books properly. If you can't manage to keep all our accounts in
good order because of your book-keeper, write home and maybe we can
suggest a plan ... If you are organised, organised in your writing and
careful in the way you give credit, I don't doubt that you will do well.
Nor did this paternal lecture end there. Mayer Amschel went on to berate
Nathan for failing to calculate his profits net (as opposed to gross); for
doing business with Rindskopf in precious stones ("But you are no jeweller")
and for failing to discount bad debts:
My dear son, you must not be angry when a father, who has the happiness
of all his children at heart, asks to know the real state of your
finances, because if you have many bad debts, which God forbid, and
enter them as if they are good, that is simply to pretend that you are rich
... My dear son, you are hard-working. Do your bit like a good boy. You
can't do more. I just want to encourage you to be more organised ...
You really have a good brain but you haven't learnt [the importance of]
order, and here I see that all the merchants who are well organised are
the ones who get very rich, and the ones who are disorganised are the
ones who go broke. So dear son don't take it badly when I write you my
opinion.
What is unmistakably apparent from this letter is that, in Mayer Amschel's eyes,
Nathan was still just one of five subordinates within an essentially
patriarchal family firm. Provided Nathan improved his business methods, he
could look forward to having "as good a share in my business as your brothers"
once their sisters had been married off. But until then, Mayer Amschel would
give the orders.
[Continues...]
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