Rising from poverty in a German ghetto, the Rothschild dynasty spread throughout Europe to create the most extensive multinational business network, second only to the Catholic Church. Though Rothschild is unauthorized, Wilson was granted unlimited access to family archives, along with family cooperation. Two 8-page inserts.
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Rising from poverty in a German ghetto, the Rothschild dynasty spread throughout Europe to create the most extensive multinational business network, second only to the Catholic Church. Though Rothschild is unauthorized, Wilson was granted unlimited access to family archives, along with family cooperation. Two 8-page inserts.
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Add this copy of Rothschild: the Wealth and Power of a Dynasty to cart. $13.26, very good condition, Sold by Sequitur Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Boonsboro, MD, UNITED STATES, published 1988 by Scribner.
Add this copy of Rothschild: the Wealth and Power of a Dynasty to cart. $47.07, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hialeah, FL, UNITED STATES, published 1988 by Scribner.
Add this copy of Rothschild: the Wealth and Power of a Dynasty to cart. $50.00, like new condition, Sold by Uncommon Works, IOBA, ships from Gridley, CA, UNITED STATES, published 1988 by Charles Scribner's Sons.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in very good + jacket. A fine, first American edition, with complete number line. In a very good plus, original, unclipped dust jacket showing one small closed tear to front top edge. ix, 490, [8] pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates: illustrations; index. Octavo. "A generation-spanning chronicle of the German-Jewish merchant-banking clan, which falters badly after a strong start. Wilson, a British journalist, secured the cooperation of many living family members. In the case of contemporary Rothschilds, he has made unfortunate use of his access, recording their activities in fawning fanzine prose: Baron Edmond, readers are assured, "finds the title...rather absurd and is at pains to put people at ease"; Baron Elie is characterized as becoming "most animated, not over matters financial or vinicultural, but on the subject of his family's charitable institutions." If Wilson is slavish toward the quick, though, he's judicious in his accounts of the dead--as he traces the Rothschilds' rise from their roots as enterprising coin dealers to wealth and power throughout 19th-century Europe. As the author makes clear, patriarch Mayer Amschel did not farsightedly dispatch his five sons to separate Continental capitals to launch a financial empire; the young men left on their own, mainly to escape the stifling environment of Frankfurt's ghetto. Nor, the author shows, was Nathan's legendary market killing in the wake of Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo attributable to any more remarkable means than the family's highly efficient courier service. Beyond portraying them as tireless networkers, Wilson offers precious few details on how Rothschilds managed to amass and expand fortunes. He nonetheless does a generally good job of tracking the dynasty heirs as they made their way in an often hostile and anti-Semitic world. On balance, the Rothschilds have been an accomplished, secretive but high-living and resilient lot. They have survived and thrived through wars, market panics, confiscation, and other untoward events. In addition to finance, Rothschilds have made names for themselves in ventures ranging from modern dance through the fine arts, horticulture, horse racing, wine, and philanthropy. In years past, their political influence with the likes of Bismarck, Churchill, Disraeli, and Metternich made them powers to be reckoned with. More recently, Baron Guy played a leading role in making Charles de Gaulle leader of the Free French in WW II London. The line is far from played out, but, despite Wilson's best efforts to prove otherwise, the now dispersed family's socioeconomic status in an increasingly corporate world is no longer what it once was..."---Kirkus.
Add this copy of Rothschild: the Wealth and Power of a Dynasty to cart. $67.50, like new condition, Sold by Griffin Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Stamford, CT, UNITED STATES, published 1988 by Scribner.
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Seller's Description:
Like New. Size: 9x6x1; First edition, first printing. Looks unread with just a touch of shelf wear in neatly price clipped jacket. Please email for photos.