Lucrative Facts About The Rothschilds, Europe’s Blazing Bankers

Lucrative Facts About The Rothschilds, Europe’s Blazing Bankers

The Most Mysterious Banking Family Around

The Rothschild family have been a prominent clan involved in banking centuries in Europe, yet they remain mysteriously secretive. From humble beginnings in a Jewish ghetto, they rose to the status of nobles and amassed unimaginable wealth and power. But their rise happened alongside a wave of rising prejudices against Jewish people, making them perfect scapegoats for odious conspiracy theories.

Mayer Amschel Rothschild - founder of famous banking dynasty.Culture Club, Getty Images

Advertisement

1. They Come From Germany

The Rothschilds, today one of the wealthiest families on earth, have Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, and for most of their prominence, were thought of alongside the most noble of European royalty. Originating in Frankfurt, Germany, the first known use of the name popped up nearly 500 years ago…

Rothschild HouseUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

2. Where They Began

The first ever Rothschild, that is, the first member of the family ever to use the name, was born in 1577. Though the family would not rise to prominence for another 200 years or so, Isaak Elchanan Rothschild was the first to adopt the moniker. The name was very close to home.

Rothschildpalais in Frankfurt 1855Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

3. The Origin Of The Name

Isaak likely chose the name "Rothschild" for the building in which the family would live for generations. Derived from the German zum rothen Schild, which means “at the red shield," the family house prominently featured such a shield in Isaak’s day. Symbols like this on buildings acted as a precursor to house numbers at the time. 

He could not have imagined the dazzling success the name would eventually represent.

Das Palais des Freiherrn Albert von Rothschild in der damaligen Heugasse 26 im 4. Wiener Gemeindebezirk (Gartenseite)Hippolyte Destailleur, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

4. They Got Into Banking

1744 saw the birth of Mayer Amschel Rothschild in Frankfurt, and though no one knew it yet, Mayer would be responsible for the family’s glorious ascent. The son of a money changer, Mayer decided to expand his father’s business into banking in the 1760s. But it was not an easy beginning.

Mayer Amschel RothschildElbert Hubbard - no picture credit, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

5. They Had A Dark History

Mayer’s origins were humble: He was born in the "Judengasse," a poverty-stricken Jewish ghetto in Frankfurt, where many Jewish people had sought refuge after antisemitic pogroms a few centuries earlier. It was from this very ghetto that he established a finance house. But it was his next move that would prove decisive for the family.

File:Moritz Daniel Oppenheim (1800-1882) - The Elector of Hesse Entrusting Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1743–1812), with His Treasure - 1535170 - National Trust.jpgMoritz Daniel Oppenheim, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

6. He Spread His Wealth Around

After some success, Mayer secured a position as a court factor, a banker who handled the finances of and lent money to royalty and nobility. This made him quite wealthy and, unlike previous court factors who had their wealth seized after their demise, Mayer actually managed to bequeath his wealth to his sons, who took the money and ran.

The consequences would change the course of history.

Amschel Mayer RothschildMoritz Daniel Oppenheim, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

7. They Spread Out

Mayer hatched an ingenious plan to expand his family’s influence. Passing wealth to his five sons, he instructed each of them to travel to the five main European financial centers and conduct business there, establishing the Rothschilds as the first international banking family. This brilliant strategy planted seeds that would yield golden harvests for generations to come. 

Amschel Mayer von RothschildIsrael Wiesen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

8. They Kept It In The Family

An essential aspect of Mayer’s strategy for success was the familial nature of the business. By keeping control of all their banks in family hands, the Rothschilds could maintain complete secrecy about the true size of their fortunes, meaning no royal could ever prove they were getting too big for their boots. And to deter the royals, they had to act like royals.

Amschel Mayer von Rothschild (1773-1855) Bankier. Lithographie von Friedrich Lieder, um 1830Friedrich Lieder, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement
F

History's most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

9. They Intermarried

Taking inspiration from royal intermarriage, Mayer Rothschild also ensured his family’s fortune remained in their hands by strategically arranging marriages. Many of these matches brought together first- or second-cousins. This practice would last until around the late 19th century, after which most Rothschilds began marrying beyond the family circle. But by then, they had firmly established bureaucratic checks and balances too.

Caricature of Baron MA de Rothschild MP. Caption readCarlo Pellegrini, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

10. They Changed The Game

The Rothschilds were systematic about protecting their assets, and they changed the very practices of banking in order to hold on to them. They chose to safeguard their assets through financial instruments, moving them around the globe through bonds, stocks, and debts. This proved incredibly effective in protecting their wealth from political upheavals, mobs, and monarchs. 

Soon, they were on equal footing with some of the most powerful families in the world.

Cartoon of Baron Mayer Amschel de Rothschild, probably by Spy.
The print of which this is a scan is clearly dated 1874. Therefore in the public domain by virtue of age.File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

11. They Earned Their Way To The Top

Such was the success of the Rothschilds’ business that they pulled the entire family into a new social class. From humble beginnings serving nobility, the family members were eventually elevated to noble ranks in Austria, the United Kingdom, and even the waning Roman Empire. By the 1800s, their domination was unmatched.

Untitled DesignHulton Archive, Getty Images

Advertisement

12. They Were Unspeakably Rich

Though they were secretive about the exact figure of their wealth, by the 19th century, no one could deny it: The Rothschilds possessed the largest private fortune in the world and, indeed, the largest in modern history. With such vast and unimaginable wealth, inevitably, the powers that be would approach the family with their hands out.

Waddesdon Manor & GardensColin Park, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

13. They Funded Conflict

By the outbreak of the Napoleonic Wars in 1803, the Rothschilds' immeasurable wealth was common knowledge, and they received appeals for financial assistance in the conflict from the highest halls of power. The family came to the aid of Britain, assisting in funding the conflict. To be fair, there were few other places loan-seekers could go.

File:Brodowski Napoleon Elbe.jpgJózef Brodowski, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

14. They Were The Only Game In Town

Between the 1820s and the 1870s, the Rothschilds had achieved complete dominance over European finance. Their monopoly ensured that any clients they took on would only guarantee further massive payouts for the family. And with these huge profits, they reinvested in that dominance.

Untitled Design (1)Agence Meurisse, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

15. They Had A Private Network

The Rothschilds’ massive operation ran like a well-oiled machine. This network comprised all manner of elements, from gold transportation between their branches to their widespread connections, which supplied the family with political and financial information before anyone else. They turned this information into—what else? —massive profits.

מאיר אנשל רוטשילדJewish National Fund, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

16. They Played The Market

After the British victory in the Battle of Waterloo, the Rothschilds’ network sent word back to Nathan Rothschild, information he received a full day before British government officials. After this information went public, Nathan saw his opportunity.

He predicted that government bonds were due to bounce after the stabilization brought about by the new peace and, audaciously, purchased the entire government bond market, selling the bonds two years later for a massive profit as predicted. This payload would serve the family well as the world rapidly industrialized.

en:Nathan Mayer Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild.The original uploader was Briangotts at English Wikipedia. Later versions were uploaded by Mecu at en.wikipedia., Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

17. They Globalized

With the dawn of the industrial revolution, the Rothschilds once again saw a golden opportunity to make more cash. They pioneered international high finance, setting it up for the financial globalization we see today, and invested in countless ventures across the Old World, starting with trade.

Autochrome of Nathan Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild, circa 1910Lionel Nathan de Rothschild (1882 - 1942), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

18. They Created The Supply Line

The Rothschilds knew that an industrializing world would see a rapid expansion in trade, and they quickly hitched their wagon to new forms of transportation. They were instrumental in the funding of railway systems and even backed complicated government projects like the Suez Canal. They oversaw some huge political shifts too.

Торжественное открытие Суэцкого канала.Сканирование: Владимир Васильев, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

19. They Redrew Maps

Interestingly, the Rothschild family took a direct involvement in Brazilian independence from Portugal. Clearly seeing opportunities for investment and profit, the Rothschilds certainly played their cards right, and Brazil even agreed to take over the repayment of a loan to the family taken out by Portugal. It was not the last time the family would involve themselves in statecraft.

Departure of the Prince Regent of Portugal, John VI of Portugal, and all the Royal Family to Brazil.Henri L'Evêque, Wikimedia Commons

20. They Formed A Nation

The Rothschilds were so powerful that they even engaged in a little colonialism: They funded mining magnate Cecil Rhodes in his creation of the African colony of Rhodesia, eventually taking over control of the Rio Tinto mining company and its operations there, doubtlessly at the cost of hundreds of African lives. Perhaps in Africa, they found a few pieces to add to their collection too…

Portrait of Cecil Rhodesunattributed, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

21. A Family Of Culture

Because of their immense wealth, the Rothschilds lived lavishly and became known for more than just their banking. They gained reputations as collectors of fine art, owned many palaces across the European continent, and even engaged in large-scale philanthropy. Their properties, in particular, became a key symbol of their wealth.

Das Welthaus Rothschild. (The World of the Rothschilds) Mayer Amschel Rothschild with other members of his family.The depicted family members with the picture caption of the original – (clockwise): 
Mayer Karl Rothschild, Frankfurt, 1820–1866.
Nath. Mayer v. Rothschild, London, 1877–1836.
Baron Lion. Nath. Rothschild, London, 1808–1879.
James v. Rothschild, Paris, 1792–1868.
Baron Alb. v. Rothschild, Wien, 1844.
Sal. Mayer v. Rothschild, Wien, 1744–1855.
Anselm Sal. Frh. v. Rothschild, Wien, 1830 [sic] –1874.

Anselm [sic] Mayer v. Rothschild, Frankfurt, 1773–1855. In the middle: Mayer Amschel Rothschild Frankfurt, 1745–1812, Begründer des Hauses Rothschild.Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

22. They Made Royals Jealous

One of the Rothschilds’ most impressive properties was the Château de Ferrières outside Paris. Wilhelm I, the Emperor of Germany, summed the sheer scale of the estate up on a visit to the château, when he exclaimed: “No kings could afford this! It could only belong to a Rothschild”. It was at about this point that the Rothschilds would peak, however.

Schloss Ferrières-en-BrieMulleimers at German Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

23. They Began To Wane

By the late 1800s, with Europe rocked by revolution in country after country, the Rothschilds’ fortune began a period of relative decline. In fact, they would soon begin closing branches.

The Naples bank was the first to shut its doors with the reunification of Italy and the resulting political turbulence. The German branch would follow in 1901 after the demise of the Rothschild patriarch there, who had no male heirs. Changes in the world of finance altered the playing field too.

Carl Mayer von RothschildMoritz Daniel Oppenheim, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

24. There Was A New Game In Town

The hegemony over banking that the family had previously enjoyed for centuries began to crumble in the late-19th century with the emergence of joint stock banks, meaning several sources of finance could pool together to rival even the Rothschilds’ wealth. Indeed, their share of the pie was certainly no longer as large.

Das Welthaus Rothschild. (The World of the Rothschilds) Mayer Amschel Rothschild with other members of his family.The depicted family members with the picture caption of the original – (clockwise): 
Mayer Karl Rothschild, Frankfurt, 1820–1866.
Nath. Mayer v. Rothschild, London, 1877–1836.
Baron Lion. Nath. Rothschild, London, 1808–1879.
James v. Rothschild, Paris, 1792–1868.
Baron Alb. v. Rothschild, Wien, 1844.
Sal. Mayer v. Rothschild, Wien, 1744–1855.
Anselm Sal. Frh. v. Rothschild, Wien, 1830 [sic] –1874.

Anselm [sic] Mayer v. Rothschild, Frankfurt, 1773–1855. In the middle: Mayer Amschel Rothschild Frankfurt, 1745–1812, Begründer des Hauses Rothschild.Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

25. There Were Unseated

By the 20th century, the Rothschilds’ wealth began steadily declining. They were still filthy rich, of course, but with the rise of finance capital, they were no longer exceptionally so. Furthermore, there were now so many descendants that wealth got split among more inheritors. The rise of another global hegemon also contributed to the family’s drop in relevance.

Former Rothschild mansion , previously Hotel Laborde on rue Laffitte, Paris19th century drawing, author unidentified, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

26. They Ignored The New World

The Rothschilds were a European family through and through—and, in the 20th century, this proved to their detriment. The family never truly established a presence in America, never recognizing the fruitful opportunities there, and with the post-war boom, this left them in the dust. And while they certainly do not occupy the perch they once did, the family is still incredibly influential today.

L'anglais Lionel Walter Rothschild avec son attelage de zèbres.American Library of Congress, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

27. They Diversified

The Rothschilds were never ones to keep all their eggs in one basket, and today, the family’s assets cover a diverse range of sectors. These include agriculture, energy, financial services, mining, and real estate. And they innovated in another sector that you might not expect.

Lionel Walter Rothschild (1868 – 1937)Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

28. A Family Of Sommeliers

For over 150 years, the Rothschilds have been big players in the winemaking industry. They own many wine estates and have even contributed, through the scientist Baron Philippe de Rothschild, to the process of development of fine wines. But what of their emblematic banks?

Autochrome:Georges Chevalier, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

29. Two Remaining

After the closure of significant amounts of their banking operations, today, the only subsisting branches of the Rothschild family banks are those in France and Britain. Though the Rothschilds’ family story is far from finished, we could consider it in an ebb at the moment. Fortunately, there are individual family members who provide more than enough entertainment.

Firmenschreiben der Rothschild Bank Frankfurt, 1876, an den späteren Verleger Emil Sommer in EdenkobenAltera levatur, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

30. The Jazz Baroness

The first Rothschild in our exploration of interesting family members is the exhaustingly-named Baroness Kathleen Annie Pannonica “Nica” de Koenigswarter (a Rothschild by birth who gave up her name upon getting married). Known for her hedonistic lifestyle in early-20th century America, Nica’s patronage of jazz music earned her the nickname “The Bebop Baroness”. 

Quite scandalously, she abandoned her five children and husband to chase her new passions in New York City—and in doing so, she began rubbing elbows with some of the true greats.

Waddesdon Manor front face Taken on an exceptionally warm summers day, this beautiful manor must count among England's finest stately homes.Oliver Newbury, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

31. Titans Of Jazz

Nica was not just known as a faceless moneywoman. She was a true jazz aficionado, spending much of her time in the clubs and engaging in the jazz lifestyle, shoulder-to-shoulder with some big names. She became a patron to some of her famous friends, such as Charlie Parker and Thelonious Monk. And she would do anything for them.

Portrait of Charlie Parker in the Three Deuces of New York (N.Y.), in August 1947. Parker is playing a Conn 6M alto saxophone. Standing next to him is Miles Davis.William P. Gottlieb, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

32. She Welcomed Him In

In 1955, Nica was staying in her suite at the Stanhope Hotel when she heard a desperate knock at the door. It was none other than Charlie Parker—and he was in a chilling state. Suffering from several health issues, like liver damage and stomach ulcers, the musician had nowhere else to seek refuge. Nica could have easily shut the door in his face, but instead, she welcomed him in.

Little did she know, a nightmare was about to transpire.

Charlie Parker, Downbeat, New York, N.Y., ca. 1947 (Photograph by William P. Gottlieb)William P. Gottlieb, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

33. He Perished In Her Apartment

Tragically, Charlie Parker met his end in Nica's apartment, choking and perishing on her couch. In the wake of his sudden passing, the press went wild and painted her in a negative light. Conspiracy theories erupted, with some wondering whether Nica had actually covered up Parker's murder. In the end, she faced an eviction. 

But despite this dark chapter, she never stopped extending a helping hand to artists in need.

Portrait of Charlie Parker, Tommy Potter, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie and Max Roach, Three Deuces, New York, N.Y. Charlie Parker is playing a 1920s Martin 'Handcraft' alto saxophone.William P. Gottlieb, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

34. Taking The Fall

In 1958, while accompanying Monk on a tour, Nica and the jazz legend were charged with substance possession by authorities in Delaware. Nica’s insistence that Monk’s show must go on was so strong that she took the fall and spent a few nights behind bars. They later sentenced her to three years in prison, but she had the case dismissed after her family bankrolled a two-year legal battle. 

It wasn’t the first time the Baroness had gotten her hands dirty.

Thelonious Monk, Minton's Playhouse, New York, ca. September 1947. Photograph by William P. GottliebWilliam P. Gottlieb / Adam Cuerden, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

35. Freedom Fighters

Nica’s life is chock-full of wild stories. Despite being born in London, the Baroness travelled to occupied France during WWII where she joined the French Free Army, the clandestine resistance group fighting the occupation. At the conflict’s end, she received decoration as a lieutenant. Not all Rothschilds were as impressive, however…

General De Gaulle inspecting sailors on the Free French destroyer Léopard at Greenock, 24 June 1942.Coote, R G G (Lt), Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

36. Businessmen

Our next stop in Rothschild family history is Sir Evelyn Robert Adrian de Rothschild. Born in London in 1931, Evelyn spent his twenties as a classic spoiled rich kid, travelling, socializing, driving cars, and betting on horses. At 26, he finally joined the family banking business and, over time, accrued some big clients.

Sculpture of Evelyn de RothschildSteven Whyte, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

37. Serving Royalty

Evelyn’s privilege and nepotistic credentials meant that he quickly climbed the ranks of N M Rothschild & Sons banking house, eventually earning the title of chairman of Rothschilds Continuation Holdings AG. In his role, he served as the financial advisor for some big names; chief among them was Queen Elizabeth II. And like many members of the Royal Family, Evelyn had a scandalous private life.

Princess Elizabeth (United Kingdom)Yousuf Karsh, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

38. A Mysterious Disappearance

Evelyn married Jeanette Bishop in 1966, and the couple would divorce five years later. That was not the end of Jeanette’s story, however. In 1980, while in Italy, Jeanette disappeared into the snowy Sibillini Mountains with another woman, Gabriella Guerin. No one knows why the women decided to venture into such treacherous conditions, and they were never heard from again.

Ellen Dorothy Jeanette BishopUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

39. A Devastating Discovery

The women's bodies were found over a year later, and while the authorities’ initial determination was that they had perished from hypothermia, the losses were later ruled to be more sinister, likely at the hands of unidentified assailants with an unknown motive. And while Evelyn was never a suspect, he certainly had something to hide.

חלקת קברו של אוולין דה רוטשילד בראש הגבעה בבית העלמין הישן בראשון לציון.Neukoln, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

40. Skeletons In The Closet

As early as 2004 and as recently as 2025, Evelyn de Rothschild has had multiple, credible allegations made against him of misconduct, harassment, and assault, with most of the incidents occurring in the 1990s. Many of these allegations were levelled against him posthumously, meaning he never had to deal with them.

Sculpture of Evelyn de RothschildSteven Whyte, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

41. Rich On Paper

Returning to Nathan Mayer Rothschild, perhaps the most notable family figure, he himself was responsible for a huge change in the way we think about wealth today. Nathan reportedly became the world’s first “paper millionaire”. This meant that he was the first person to use bonds and loans to build his wealth as opposed to physical goods and gold. 

Being such high rollers, the Rothschilds couldn’t help but intersect with another prominent wing of the elite.

unknown artist; Nathan Mayer (1840-1915), Lord Rothschild; Buckinghamshire County Council; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/nathan-mayer-18401915-lord-rothschild-26970unknown artist, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

42. Hollywood Ties

With such prominence, it was inevitable that a Rothschild would eventually end up involved with a Hollywood star, and that Rothschild was Afdera Franchetti. Afdera was a socialite who rubbed shoulders with the likes of Truman Capote, John F and Jackie Kennedy, Warren Beatty, and Audrey Hepburn.

Hepburn introduced Afdera to Henry Fonda, and the two were married when he was 51 and she was only 25, just seven years older than Fonda’s eldest daughter. That’s Hollywood covered, but the Rothschilds even had a hand in the sporting world.

Mrs. Kennedy in the Diplomatic Reception Room, 05 December 1961
White House, Diplomatic Reception RoomRobert LeRoy Knudsen, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

43. Racing Patron

Amschel Mayor James Rothschild, a businessman from the British branch of the family, had many interesting hobbies. Among them were farming and motor racing, the latter of which he became a keen patron of. Off the track, though, Amschel lived a dark life.

Untitled Design (2)Karl Döringer, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

44. The Darkness Inside

Despite his lavish and leisure-filled lifestyle, Amschel Rothschild could not escape his demons; the man suffered from lifelong and untreated depression. He was especially close to his widowed mother, and her demise was too much for poor Amschel. 

In July 1996, he was found in a hotel room in Paris, where he had taken his own life. But for all we know about these individual Rothschilds, our knowledge of the family overall is surprisingly limited.

Tombstone for Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812) at the old Jewish cemetery (Battonnstraße Cemetery) in Frankfurt am Main
The text is translated:
Honored Mr. Meir Rothschild 573
Here rests the donor, the dear master, Mr. Mosche Meir,
Son of Blessed, Honored Mr. Amschel Rothschild,
His memory as a blessing, deceased in the night of the ending of the holy Shabbat
And buried the next day, on day 1,
Eve of Sukkot, 573 of the small count (lifrat katan). His soul is intertwined
into the bundle of life, with the souls of Avraham, Yizchak and Yaakov, Sara, Rivka and Rachel,

With the souls of the other just men and women who are in the Garden of Eden. AmenGenealogist, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

45. The Enigma Family

Despite the choice cuts above, the Rothschild family has remained largely elusive and shrouded in mystery. And while much has been written about them, hardly any of it is revealing—or even, in many cases, true. One writer who had planned a book about them abandoned the project, saying about her research on the family, “It was relatively easy to spot the lies, but it proved impossible to find out the truth”. And indeed, many of these lies have been pernicious.

Title: Lord Rothschild
Abstract/medium: 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.Bain News Service, publisher, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

46. Grand Conspiracies

Due to their elusive nature, their unimaginable wealth, and good old-fashioned European bigotry, the Rothschilds have inevitably become the subject of countless prejudiced conspiracy theories over the years. There is no truth to these odious claims, but they have unfortunately found quite a purchase in the lunatic zeitgeist.

Mentmore Towers, Buckinghamshire, EnglandThe original uploader was Swanker at English Wikipedia., Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

47. Odious Lies

Because of their Jewish faith, the Rothschilds are far too often deployed as the prime example from those touting disgusting conspiracy theories that Jewish folks control global finance. This has, regrettably, become somewhat ubiquitous in certain circles, and it has dark origins.

File:Reuven Rubin and Bethsabée de Rothschild (997009932959805171).jpgBoris Carmi, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

48. Early Roots

The origin of such prejudiced conspiracy theories around the Rothschilds can be traced back to 1846, where a pamphlet began circulating around Europe pushing a false narrative about the family and its influence on Europe. Written by a man using the pseudonym “Satan," the text is chock-full of lies and falsities. But one important source unfortunately legitimized it…

Portraits du Prince Troubetzkoy, Baronne Alphonse de Rothschild, Baron Gustave de Rothschild, Marquis Boni de Castellane, Emile Deschamps et autres personnages, Champ de courses, course équestre, modes, chapeaux, jumellesSem, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

49. On Record

One of the main assertions of the pamphlet was that Nathan Rothschild had been present at the Battle of Waterloo, and that he used his knowledge of the English victory before the government had found out to vastly enrich himself.

This claim has been disproven, yet so many people in Europe believed it that it was published as fact in the 11th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, lending legitimacy to the false claim for a generation. The harmful effects of this rippled through the century.

Jopling, Louise; Sir Nathan Mayer de Rothschild (1840-1915), 2nd Bt, Baron Rothschild (Austria) and 1st Baron Rothschild (UK), PC, GCVO; National Trust, Hughenden Manor; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/sir-nathan-mayer-de-rothschild-1840-1915-2nd-bt-baron-rothschild-austria-and-1st-baron-rothschild-uk-pc-gcvo-217714Louise Jopling, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

50. Fleeing The Enemy

With the rise of Fascism in Germany, these kinds of narratives got inevitably picked up and deployed against the German Jewish population, laying the groundwork for their justification of the Holocaust. Indeed, as the tide of public opinion turned sharply against them, the German Rothschilds fled the country entirely, and the Fuhrer's government seized many of their assets. Unfortunately, the conspiracy theories have found new life in the 21st century.

The Inscription of the Commemorative Plaque for the Victims of Fascism reads:Duesseljan, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

51. Modern Day Allegations

In 2018, Washington DC lawmaker Trayon White Sr found himself in hot water when he alleged, in a Facebook post, that the Rothschilds “[control] the climate to create natural disasters they can pay for to own the cities”, vaguely alluding to a philanthropic initiative the family started to address environmental concerns.

The lawmaker later apologized, but the damage had been done. 

DC Council Member Trayon WhiteWJLA-TV, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

52. There's So Much Mystery

Wielding such great power and wealth, it's no wonder that the story of the Rothschild family has been subjected to so much public scrutiny. And though conspiracy theories and criticism punctuate their legacy, so much mystery remains. Secretive and private all the way through, there's only so much we can know about the Rothschilds. And so we take the stories that have slipped through, and try to glean as much as we possibly can.

Portrait of Yvonne Lydia Louise Cahen d'Anvers Rothschild (1899–1977) and Anthony Gustav de Rothschild (1887–1961) from The American Hebrew, Volume 119, Number 9, July 9, 1926, page 283Unknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

Advertisement

You May Also Like:

Queen Maria Anna Of Neuberg Was Too Smart For Her Own Good

The Richest Man On The Titanic

The Dark History Of The Hilton Family

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10


More from Factinate

More from Factinate




Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.