THE EX-KAISER’S WEALTH
IiEP All ATI OXS AND MAGNATES. THere was a noticeable tendency in the democratic Press during the weeks of' debate over Germany’s Reparation payments to check the pre-war and present taxable value of their estates (writes the “Observer’s” Berlin correspondent). <i The compiler of the pre-war Millionaire’s Handbook, Herr Rudolf Martin, formerly an official in the German Home Office, had been at some pains to discover the readjustment of property to circumstances. Ilis conclus;ons point to the fact that the archenemy of the German magnate, Poland, wnich annexed some of the finest and most lucrative properties in Silesia, has not done more than check what would have been an unfair growth of the prosperity of one of two Germans subjects due to the increase in the prices Oi wood and timber in general. His list of the ten richest men in Germany to-day is sad reading for Republicans. Seven princes and three industrialists share their country’s richest spoils between them in almost exactly the same ratio as they did before the war. The paper-mark period has been safely weathered. Coal under the ground and trees growing above it have not proved false to those who originally placed their faith in them. In bpite of all that has been written to prove the contrary, the ex-Kaiser remains , very rhuch the richest man of his country.. His fortune is estimated at fifteen million pounds, and the extent of the estates belonging to him at over two hundred thousand acres. There are another* hundred thousand acres owned by various members of the house of Hohenzollcrn. though the exCrown Prince’s present home at Oels, in Silesia, is part of his.father’s private property. The reasons for believing the ex-Kaiser in a worse financial position than that of his countrymen whose fortune is nearly as great, is that he has forty-nine'families for which he is technically responsible, and, as head o. his house, he may be called upon at any moment to pay out large sums required by any member of it. Prince Albert of Tliurn and Taxis, in South Germany, has gained so much by the increase in value of his wood and forests that he ranks as Germany's second richest man, with a fortune of tnirteen and a half million pounds. As third ranks Iran Bertha Krupp von Bolden and Halbach, whose ten million pounds to-day represents a far ismallei sum than her pre-war possessions. In consequence of the readjustment of Krupp’s works of peace-time production, swords being turned into ploughshares, and cannon into cameras and stainless steel knives, the coal minps, the blast furnaces and smelting yards of the Krupp family have triumphantly overcome all the difficulties that beset their production after thff Armistice. The firm is a family concern.
Frau Krupp’s nearest rival is the Ruhr magnate, Fritz Thyssen, whose seven million pounds represents only a small particle of the property owned by the several brothers of this house. The
Thyssen, steelworks are very little wealthier than the works of the great Rhenish ironmaster, Otto "Wolff, of Cologne, whose personal six million pounds are certainly equalled by the fortune o( his partner, Ottmar Strauss. Students of economy will recognise that the books giving details of the great post-war fortunes of the Stinnes family and certain of their contemporaries are out of da,te. All tlipse names belong to the days during and before the Great War. Neither revolution nor inflation affected their owners permanently; the Ruhr occupation led to a reimbursement by the German Government;,the struggles between Capital and Labour always, it seems, more embittered in this part of the country than elsewhere, have certainly not shaken the foundations of those industries whose importance to-day in the question of Reparations payments is infinitely greater than when they supplied the Imperial Army.
Prince Johann Hohenlohe Oehringen, whose land in Silesia has rich deposits of coal and zinc, is Germany’s sixth richest man, with a fortune of more than six million pounds. He is run very closely by Prince Maximilian Egon zu Furstenberg, whose Black Forest woodlands were valued, when he asked for a loan from the Deutsche Bank before the war, at over four million pounds. Timber has increased in value since then, so that Prince Maximilian is another two millions to the good, and richer to-day than Prince Guidotto Henckel von Donnersmark, who suffered depredation by the Poles, and who, equally with his brother, possesses between three and four million pounds.
...Prince : Henry of Pless, though he, too/'lost' money when he lost land to Poland, has Hie., richest coal deposits under his laful of any man in Germany. •' Nearly ten thousand miners are working in his mines, and the increase in coal prices lips more than outweighed the loss of his Polish domains. His five million pounds and more are equalled by the fortune of Prince Friedrich of Prussia, who is the son of tlfe Prince Albrecht, former prince regent of Brunswick, whose palace in tho Wilhehnstresse is hired by the German Government to-day for visiting potentates and whose money is derived from vast estates on the
Rhine and in Silesia
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19300108.2.5
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Hokitika Guardian, 8 January 1930, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
851THE EX-KAISER’S WEALTH Hokitika Guardian, 8 January 1930, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
The Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd is the copyright owner for the Hokitika Guardian. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of the Greymouth Evening Star Co Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.