Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-26T22:38:27.409Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Business Elites of Hamburg and Berlin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Dolores L. Augustine
Affiliation:
St. John's University New York

Extract

In many respects, Hamburg and Berlin represent two societal models at work in Wilhelmian Germany. Hamburg and the other Hanseatic cities, Lübeck and Bremen, have traditionally been thought to represent bourgeois society as it might have been in Germany as a whole: self-assured, liberal, and antiaristocratic. Historians are generally in agreement with Richard J. Evans in his assertion that “neither the economic activity nor the social world nor finally the political beliefs and actions of the Hamburg merchants corresponded to anything that has ever been defined, however remotely, as ‘feudal.’” Berlin, on the other hand, was dominated by the imperial court and the aristocracy, which, it is said, seduced and fatally weakened not only the business elite of the capital, but in fact the most influential segment of the German bourgeoisie as a whole.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

This essay is a revised version of a talk given at the American Historical Association convention in December 1990. It summarizes parts of Dolores L. Augustine, “Die wilhelminische Wirtschaftselite. Sozialverhalten, soziales Selbstbewusstsein und Familie” (Ph.D. diss., Free University of Berlin, 1991). Research for this paper was supported in part by a grant from the International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX), with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the United States Information Agency. None of these organizations are responsible for the views expressed.

1. Evans, Richard J., Death in Hamburg (Oxford, 1987), 559.Google Scholar

2. Cecil, Lamar, “Jew and Junker in Imperial Berlin,” Yearbook of the Leo Baeck Institute 10 (1975): 4758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3. Stern, Fritz, Gold and Iron: Bismarck, Bleichröder, and the Building of the German Empire (New York, 1977).Google Scholar

4. Other recent works on the German-Jewish bourgeoisie include Kaplan, Marion A., The Making of the Jewish Middle Class: Women in German-Jewish Identity in Imperial Germany (Oxford, 1991);Google ScholarMosse, Werner E., The German-Jewish Economic Elite, 1820–1935: A Socio-Cultural Profile (Oxford, 1989);Google ScholarVolkov, Shulamit, “Jüdische Assimilation und jüdische Eigenart im Deutschen Kaiserreich,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 9 (1983): 331–48;Google ScholarSholem, Gershom, “On the Social Psychology of the Jews in Germany, 1900–1933,” in Bronsen, David, ed., Jews and Germans from 1860 to 1933 (Heidelberg, 1979), 932;Google ScholarHellige, Hans Dieter, “Generationskonflikt, Selbsthass und die Entstehung antikapitalistischer Positionen im Judentum,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 5 (1979): 476518;Google ScholarLandes, David, “Bleichröders and Rothschilds: The Problem of Continuity in the Family Firm,” in Rosenburg, Charles E., ed., The Family in History (Philadelphia, 1975), 95114.Google Scholar

5. Dahrendorf, Ralf, Gesellschaft und Demokratie in Deutschland (Munich, 1965).Google Scholar

6. See Kaelble, Hartmut, “Wie feudal waren die deutschen Unternehmer im Kaiserreich?” in Tilly, Richard, ed., Beiträge zur quantitativen vergleichenden Unternehmensgeschichte (Stuttgart, 1985), 148.Google Scholar

7. See Augustine-Pérez, Dolores L., “Very Wealthy Businessmen in Imperial Germany,” Journal of Social History 22 (1988): 299321;CrossRefGoogle ScholarAugustine, Dolores L., “Arriving in the Upper Class: The Wealthy Business Elite of Wilhelmine Germany,” in Blackbourn, David and Evans, Richard J., eds., The German Bourgeoisie (London, 1991), 4686;Google Scholar“The Banker in German Society,” in Cassis, Youssef, ed., Finance and Financiers in European History, 1880–1960 (London, 1991), 161–85;CrossRefGoogle Scholar“Die soziale Stellung jüdischer Unternehmer am Beispiel Berlin, ” in Mosse, Werner E. and Pohl, Hans, eds., Jüdische Unternehmer in Deutschland im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert (64. Beiheft der Zeitschrift für Unternehmensgeschichte), date of publication unknown.Google Scholar

8. Martin, Rudolf, Jahrbuch der Millionäre Deutschlands, 18 vols. (Berlin, 19121914).Google Scholar Data was supplemented with information from numerous reference works, such as the Neue Deutsche Biographie, 13 vols. (Berlin, 19531982)Google Scholar. The most important archive for the quantitative study was the “Institut zur Erforschung historischer Führungsschichten” in Bensheim, West Germany. The state archives of the GDR in Potsdam, Merseburg, Leipzig, and Dresden also yielded a considerable body of data. Further material was gained through correspondence with descendents of the persons under study, genealogists, and public archives in West Germany.

9. There has been a great deal of debate on which groups should be included as Jews. Ideally, an ethnic definition of Jewishness would include converted Jews and Christians, whose family was Jewish a couple of generations back—such as the Mendelssohns—only to the extent that these individuals considered themselves to be Jewish or who demonstrated solidarity with the Jewish community. In actual practice, it is very difficult to use self-definition as a criterion in a quantitative study. Thus, converted Jews and Christians of Jewish families were considered to be Jews for the purposes of the present study. For a similar definition of Jewishness, see Mosse, Werner E., Jews in the German Economy: The German-Jewish Economic Elite, 1820–1935 (Oxford, 1987), 12Google Scholar. Mosse points out that the Judaic religion constituted just one element of Jewish identity in this era, along with social origins, endogamy, family and business networks, and traditions.

10. For example, the heavy industrialist Fritz von Friedländer-Fuld. See Vierhaus, Rudolf, ed., Das Tagebuch der Baronin Spitzemberg, geb. Freiin von Varnbüler. Aufzeichnungen aus der Hofgesellschaft des Hohenzollernreiches, 3rd ed., (Göttingen, 1963), 456.Google Scholar

11. See Fürstenberg, Carl, Die Lebensgeschichte eines deutschen Bankiers (Berlin, 1931), 199;Google ScholarMosse, Werner E., “Rudolf Mosse and the House of Mosse 1867–1920,” Year Book of the Leo Baeck Institute 4 (1959): 250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12. Paraphrased in Hauschild-Thiessen, Renate, Bürgerstolz und Kaisertreue (Hamburg, 1979), 97; see 98105.Google Scholar Also quoted and translated in Evans, Death, 35; see 33–35.

13. Zentrales Staatsarchiv, Dienststelle Merseburg, Geheimes Zivilkabinett, 2.2.1. Nr. 1048, Bl. 1–20. See Hauschild-Thiessen, Bürgerstolz, 97; Stein, Hans-Konrad, Der preussische Geldadel des 19. Jahrhunderts (unpublished Ph.D. diss. Hamburg, 1982), 1718, 68.Google Scholar

14. See Evans, Death, 560–62.

15. See Blackbourn, David, “The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie: Reappraising German History in the Nineteenth Century,” in Blackbourn, David and Eley, Geoff, The Peculiarities of German History (Oxford and New York, 1984), 230–37;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Kaelble, “Wie feudal,” 164–66. On Hamburg, see Hauschild-Thiessen, Buägerstolz, 97.

16. See Rubinstein, William David, Men of Property (London, 1981), 170.Google Scholar

17. For a systematic classification of professions, see Lundgreen, Peter, Kraul, Margret, and Ditt, Karl, Bildungschancen und soziale Mobilität in der städtischen Gesellschaft des 19. Jahrhunderts (Göttingen, 1988)Google Scholar, appendix 2, 319–64. (They define the upper middle class as part of the upper class.)

18. Included in this category are members of the high nobility (where no profession is known) and Landräte.

19. See Henning, Hansjoachim, “Das Bildungsbürgertum in den preussischen Westprovinzen” in Das westdeutsche Bürgertum in der Epoche der Hochindustrialisierung 1860–1914 (Wiesbaden, 1972), 267413.Google Scholar

20. In Germany, teachers and professors were civil servants; Lutheran ministers were civil servants in some periods. Sociologically, these groups clearly belong to the Bildungsbürgertum.

21. Somewhat over half.

22. See Richarz, Monika, ed., Jüdisches Leben in Deutschland, vol. 2 (Stuttgart, 1979), 32, 39.Google Scholar

23. See Rosenberg, Hans, “Die Pseudodemokratisierung der Rittergutsbesitzerklasse,” in Wehler, Hans-Ulrich, ed., Moderne deutsche Sozialgeschichte (Düsseldorf, 1981), 289–94.Google Scholar

24. See Richarz, Jüdisches Leben, 32; Preston, David L., “The German Jews in Secular Education, University Teaching, and Science,” Jewish Social Studies 38 (1976): 99116.Google Scholar

25. Hellige, Hans Dieter, “Generationskonflikt, Selbsthass und die Entstehung antikapitalistischer Positionen im Judentum. Der Einfluss des Antisemitismus auf das Sozialverhalten jüdischer Kaufmanns- und Unternehmersöhne im Deutschen Kaiserreich und in der K.u.K. Monarchie,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 5 (1979): 476518.Google Scholar

26. See Evans, Death, 21–22; Petzet, Arnold, ed., Heinrich Wiegand (Bremen, 1932), 211, 291;Google ScholarCecil, Lamar, Albert Ballin (Princeton, 1967);CrossRefGoogle ScholarRohrmann, Elsabea, Max von Schinckel (Hamburg, 1971), 186;Google ScholarSloman, Mary Amelie, Erinnerungen (Hamburg, 1957), 84, 90, 92.Google Scholar

27. See Brandes, Erika, “Der Bremer Überseekaufmann in seiner gesellschaftsgeschichtlichen Bedeutung im ‘geschlossènen Heiratskreis,’Genealogisches Jahrbuch 3 (1963): 2552.Google Scholar

28. See Evans, Death, 56–63; Rudhard, Wolfgang, Das Bürgerhaus in Hamburg (Tübingen, 1975), 98;Google ScholarWischermann, Clemens, Wohnen in Hamburg vor dem Ersten Weltkrieg (Münster, 1983), 310–11.Google Scholar

29. On the Club of Berlin, see von Gwinner, Arthur, Lebenserinnerungen, Pohl, Manfred, ed., (Frankfurt a. M., 1975), 5456;Google ScholarWolff, Max I., Club von Berlin. 1864–1924 (Berlin. 1926), esp. 2029, 89, 99;Google ScholarWallich, Paul, “Lehr- und Wanderjahre eines Bankiers,” in Zwei Generationen im deutschen Bankwesen 1833–1914 (Frankfurt a. M., 1978), 352–53.Google Scholar On a restaurant where businessmen met, see Fürstenberg, C., Lebensgeschichte, 397.Google Scholar

30. Ibid., esp. 254, 262, 263, 308, 315, 350, 355, 369, 371, 436, 509ff.; Fürstenberg, Hans, Carl-Fürstenberg-Anekdoten. Ein Unterschied muss sein (Düsseldorf and Vienna, 1978), 1415.Google Scholar

31. Arnhold's best friends were heavy industrialist Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach and Adolf von Harnack, the president of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. Paul Wallich's social life in the years 1910–1912 was centered on banking and intellectual circles. On Arnhold, see Arnhold, Johanna, Eduard Arnhold (private print, Berlin, 1928), 43;Google Scholar on Israel, see Shepherd, Naomi, Wilfrid Israel: German Jewry's Secret Ambassador (London, 1984), 2021.Google Scholar On Tietz, see Tietz, Georg, Hermann Tietz. Geschichte einer Familie und ihrer Warenhäuser (Stuttgart, 1965), 49.Google Scholar On Wallich and Weisbach, see Wallich, P., “Lehr- und Wanderjahre,” 343–45;Google ScholarWeisbach, Werner, “Und alles ist zerstoben.” Erinnerungen aus der Jahrhundertwende (Vienna, Leipzig, and Zurich, 1937), 109.Google Scholar On Rathenau, see Berglar, Peter, Walther Rathenau. Seine Zeit. Sein Werk. Seine Persönlichkeit (Bremen, 1970), 311.Google Scholar

32. Solmssen, Georg, Gedenkblatt für Adolf und Sara Salomonsohn zum 19. März 1931 (private print, Berlin, 1931), 19;Google Scholar see ibid., 10–12.

33. The information on Wilhelm von Siemens is partly based on a collection of visiting cards (Siemens Archive, SAA 4/LC 999). See also Harries, Carl Dietrich, “Nachruf für Wilhelm von Siemens,” in Wissenschaftliche Veröffentlichungen aus dem Siemens-Konzern, vol. 1 (Sonderabdruck, 1920), 6, 9 (also Siemens Archive).Google Scholar Harries was Wilhelm von Siemens's brother-in-law. On Georg von Siemens, see Helfferich, Karl, Georg von Siemens (Berlin, 1923), 3:240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

34. See Fürstenberg, C., Lebensgeschichte, 255, 262, 497.Google Scholar

35. See von Hutten-Czapski, Bogdan Graf, Sechzig Jahre Politik und Gesellschaft (Berlin, 1936), 2:63;Google ScholarJaeger, Hans, Unternehmer in der deutschen Politik (1890–1918) (Bonn, 1967), 181.Google Scholar

36. On Wilhelm von Siemens, see note 33. On Arnold von Siemens, see von Bunsen, Marie, Zeitgenossen die ich erlebte 1900–1930 (Leipzig, 1932), 4244.Google Scholar

37. Townley, Lady Susan, “Indiscretions” of Lady Susan (New York, 1922), 4546.Google Scholar See also Gleichen, Lord Edward, A Guardsman's Memories: A Book of Recollections (Edinburgh and London, 1932), 276–77.Google Scholar

38. Did the Jews reject the Junkers or did the Junkers reject the Jews? It is interesting to note that the Prussian Junkers—anti-Semitic though they were—were not entirely averse to social contact and intermarriage with Jews, unlike, for example, the Hanseatic patricians, who were unwilling to share their salons and bedrooms with Jews. See Huret, Jules, En Allemagne. Berlin (Paris, 1909), 347–49.Google Scholar

39. See von der Heydt, Carl, Unser Haus (private print, place of publication unknown, 1919), 29, 30, 3537.Google Scholar

40. von Zobeltitz, Fedor, Chronik der Gesellschaft unter dem letzten Kaiserreich (Hamburg, 1922), 2:210.Google Scholar

41. Huret, En Allemagne, 346–47.

42. Ritter, Willy, von Wahlendorf, Liebermann, Erinnerung eines deutschen Juden 1863–1936, Piper, Ernst Reinhard, ed. (Munich and Zurich, 1988), 49.Google Scholar I presume that he is referring to Siegmund Aschrott.

43. See Tietz, Hermann Tietz, 49.

44. See Cecil, “Jew and Junker,” 49–50.

45. See von Wahlendorf, Liebermann, Erinnerung, esp. 49, 67, 8384;Google ScholarFürstenberg, C., Lebensgeschichte; Arnhold, Eduard Arnhold, 43;Google Scholar Shepherd, Wilfrid Israel, 20–21; Tietz, Hermann Tietz, 49; Wallich, P., “Lehr- und Wanderjahre,” 343–45;Google Scholar Weisbach, “Und alles,” 109; Berglar, Walther Rathenau, 311; von Wahlendorf, Liebermann, Erinnerung, esp. 67, 8384.Google Scholar

46. See Machule, Dittmar and Seiberlich, Lutz, “Die Berliner Villenvororte,” in Architekten, - und Berlin, Ingenieur-Verein, ed., Berlin und seine Bauten, part 4, vol. A, (Berlin, Munich, Dūsseldorf, 1970), 95;Google ScholarSchmidt, Hartwig, Das Tiergartenviertel, part 1: “1790–1870” (Berlin, 1981), 286300;Google ScholarPosener, Julius and Bergius, Burkhard, “Individuell geplante Einfamilienhäuser 1896–1968” in Architekten, und Berlin, Ingenieur-Verein, ed., Berlin und seine Bauten, part 4, vol. C (Berlin, Munich, Düsseldorf, 1975), 34;Google ScholarKerr, Alfred, Walther Rathenau (Amsterdam, 1935), 3435;Google ScholarGläser, Helga, “Die Villenkolonie als kulturelles Zentrum,” in von Berlin, Bezirksamt Wilmersdorf, ed., 100 Jahre Villenkolonie Grunewald 1889–1989 (Berlin, 1988), 6393.Google Scholar

47. Kerr, Walther Rathenau, 36. On Hermann Wallich, see Wallich, Hildegard, Erinnerungen aus meinem Leben (Altenkirchen, 1970), 110111.Google Scholar

48. Shepherd, Wilfrid Israel, 20–21. On Aniela Fūrstenberg, see Fürstenberg, C., Lebensgeschichte, 398.Google Scholar

49. Fischer, Brigitte B., Sie schrieben mir oder was aus meinem Poesiealbum wurde (Stuttgart and Zürich, 1978), 40.Google Scholar

50. Polizeipräsident Berlin to Handelsministerium, 1901, StA Potsdam, Pr.Br. Rep. 30 Berlin C Tit. 94 Nr. 9940.

51. Vasili, Comte Paul (pseud.) (according to Cecil, Catherine Princess Radziwill), La Société de Berlin, 12th ed. (Paris, 1884), 160.Google Scholar

52. von Schwering, Count Axel (pseud.), The Berlin Court under William II (London, etc., 1915), 220, 221.Google Scholar

53. On Fürstenberg, see Lebensgeschichte, 315, 396. On “receiving,” see von der Heydt, Haus, 39. On the Siemenses, see Harries, “Nachruf,” 6.

54. See Huret, En Allemagne, 104–5; von Bunsen, Zeitgenossen, 72–73; Siemens Archive SAA 4/Lc 731, vol. 2, 462.

55. Schwering, Berlin Court, 218–19.

56. See Huret, En Allemagne, 104.

57. Schwering, Berlin Court, 254–55.

58. My comment.

59. Sloman, Erinnerungen, 91. See Schramm, Percy Ernst, Neun Generationen. Dreihundert Jahre deutscher “Kulturgeschichte” im Lichte der Schicksale einer Hamburger Bürgerfamilie (Göttingen, 1964), 2:425–26.Google Scholar

60. Melchers, Gustav Adolf, Erinnerungen aus meiner Jugendzeit (private print Leipzig, 1940), 76.Google Scholar

61. See Schramm, , Neun Generationen, 2:425–26.Google Scholar

62. Veblen, Thorstein, The Theory of the Leisure Class: An Economic Study of Institutions (London ed., 1970), 42, 81.Google Scholar