Baron Joseph von Günzburg

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Baron Joseph von Günzburg (Gunzburg)

Russian: Евзель Гавриилович Гинцбург
Also Known As: "Евзель Гавриилович (Иосиф-Евзель Габриэлович) Гинцбург"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Vitebsk, Vitebsk District, Vitebsk Region, Belarus
Death: January 02, 1878 (65)
Paris, France
Immediate Family:

Son of Gabriel Jacob Gunzburg and Leah Sarah Gunzburg
Husband of Baroness Rosa Rasia von Günzburg
Father of Alexander Ziskind von Gunzburg; Baron Horace* Naftali Herz von Günzburg; Juri Uri de Gunzburg; Eve Mathilde Fould and Baron Salomon David de Günzburg
Brother of Bella Merpert; Eleone (Leonore) Rosenberg and A. Gunzburg

Occupation: винный откупщик, финансист, возведённый в 1874 году в баронское достоинство
Managed by: Simon (v.ltd.availability) Goodman
Last Updated:

About Baron Joseph von Günzburg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_G%C3%BCnzburg

born 1812, Vitebsk, Russia

made a baron in 1874 by Grand-Duke von Hessen-Darmstadt

died Jan. 12, 1878, Paris

Jewish philanthropist, banker, and financier who contributed much to the industrialization of 19th-century Russia and who successfully fought some of the discriminatory measures against Jews in Russia. His son Horace carried on his philanthropic work, and his grandson David was a well-known Orientalist and bibliophile.

After an early career as a contractor for the government, he founded a banking firm in 1859 in St. Petersburg. Along with other wealthy Russian Jewish families, he also financed the building of much of Russia's railroad network. He was created a baron in the early 1870s.

Günzburg is best remembered for his activities on behalf of his persecuted coreligionists. In 1863 he helped found the Society for the Promotion of Culture Among the Jews of Russia, of which he was the first president, to “disseminate among the Jews the knowledge of the Russian language and other useful subjects” in the hope that thereby “the Jews will become full-fledged citizens of the country.” The society thrived, sponsoring translations of the Bible and other works into Russian and founding a number of Jewish cultural societies. Günzburg also succeeded in having discriminatory laws against Jews in military service removed and in gaining greater freedom of movement for Jewish merchants and artisans.

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The Gunzburgs are an ancient Jewish family who came to Byelorussia from Germany via Poland. The first documented information about them dates to the 1840s. From this time on, the history of four generations of the Gunzburgs can be traced up to 1917.
Originally, the Gunzburgs were members of the Jewish community of Vitebsk. Gabriel Yakov Gunzburg, the Vitebsk rabbi and a 1st guild merchant, had a considerable fortune. In 1849, he and his daughters Beila (Bella) and Elka were awarded hereditary honorary citizenship. In the same year, his son Yevzel (Iossel), a 1st guild merchant since 1833, filed a special petition for the rank of hereditary honorary citizen. Gabriel Gunzburg died in 1852.

Yevzel Gunzburg was awarded hereditary honorary citizenship for his "services to the treasury in wine-farming". In 1854 he was awarded the gold Medal of Merit, worn around the neck on the St. Vladimir ribbon. According to 2nd army commander, A.N. Liders, during the Crimean war he "demonstrated great and ceaseless zeal in the regular supply of wine to the troops". A 1856 poison-pen letter claimed that Gunzburg had earned up to 8 million rubles in silver, while "no Jew in Russia ever had a fortune of one million rubles in bank notes". This letter did not prevent Ye. Gunzburg from being awarded another gold medal in 1856, this time the St. Andrew ribbon. In 1874, he was assigned the rank of counselor of commerce.

In 1859, Ye.G. Gunzburg opened a banking house in St. Petersburg with a branch in Paris under the direction of his younger son Solomon. Subsequent generations of the Gunzburgs had established familial and business ties with the largest banking houses of Europe. Yevzel's son Horace (Hertz) was married to his cousin Anna Gesselevna, nee Rosenberg. Her sisters were married to banking house owner Sigismund Warburg, the well-known banker von Hirsch, Hertzfeld of Budapest, and Odessa banking house promoter Ye. Ashkenazi. Yevzel's daughter Mathilda was married to the nephew of P. Fuld, an important banker who was finance minister under Napoleon III. One of Yevzel's granddaughters entered into the marriage with baron E. Rothschield.

Ye.G. Gunzburg died in 1878 and was buried in Paris, where he had spent a great deal of time during his later years. His affairs in St. Petersburg were transacted by his elder son Horace.

Of all the numerous Gunzburgs, only the family of Horace Yevzelevich (Osipovich) remained in Russia until 1917. All of its members were engaged in business and charity. However, the recognized head of the family and the leader of all commercial and charitable undertakings was H.O. Gunzburg. He entered the history of Russian business as a major promoter of private commercial banks. He was also influential in the history of Russian charities. Russian Jewry remembers him as an extremely energetic and influential petitioner for his co-religionists, the founder of a network of Jewish educational and charitable organizations, and the leader of the St. Petersburg Jewish community for many years.

Horace's son David inherited a position in the community and extensive contacts in government circles. Unlike the rest of the family, however, he focused his interests on oriental studies rather than business. Russian Jewry is indebted to him for the first Jewish higher educational institution, the "Courses in Oriental Studies" (the Jewish Academy). His brothers Alexander, Alfred, Peter and Vladimir held stakes in many enterprises. Alexander and Alfred Gunzburg were the only Jews with the rank of reserve cornets (junior cavalry officers) in the Russian army. After David Gunzburg died, Alexander succeeded him as the head of the family. He continued the Gunzburgs' charitable activities and during the First World War he was the only Jewish member of the Tatyana Committee, which provided relief to refugees under the auspices of Great Princess Tatyana. Thanks to his petitions, Jewish refugees were allowed to move out of the Pale. In late summer, 1917 the Gunzburgs left Russia

voir Barons de Günzburg p. 676 PAM

О Евзеле Гаврииловиче Гинцбурге (русский)

Барон (с 1874) Е́взель Гаврии́лович Ги́нцбург (Иосиф-Евзель Гинцбург; 1812, Витебск — 12 января 1878, Париж) — русский финансист, откупщик, филантроп, еврейский общественный деятель. Основатель предпринимательской династии Гинцбургов, отец Горация Гинцбурга.

Родился в Витебске в семье раввина. Занимался винными откупами в Бессарабской, Киевской и Волынской губерниях. Во время Крымской войны держал винный откуп в осажденном Севастополе, причём оставил юг города, унеся кассу, одним из последних, «чуть ли не одновременно с комендантом гарнизона».

В 1859 году основал в Санкт-Петербурге один из крупнейших в России банкирских домов, который внёс значительный вклад в развитие кредитного финансирования в России. Субсидировал строительство железных дорог, добычу золота на Урале, Алтае и в Забайкалье. Пайщик Московского купеческого банка. Банкирский дом Гинцбурга в 1871 году стал одним из учредителей Русского для внешней торговли банка.

Активно отстаивал в высших государственных установлениях России интересы евреев. Пролоббировал принятие следующих высочайше утверждённых законов.

О предоставлении евреям — купцам 1-й гильдии и евреям — иностранным подданным права жительства и торговли вне черты постоянной оседлости евреев (1859). О мерах к облегчению евреям перехода из земледельческого сословия в другие (1865). О дозволении евреям механикам, винокурам, пивоварам и вообще мастерам и ремесленникам проживать повсеместно в империи (1865).

По инициативе Евзеля Гинцбурга царское правительство разрешило построить первую синагогу в Петербурге — (Большую хоральную синагогу), еврейскую общину которой он возглавлял. В 1863 году учредил Общество для распространения просвещения между евреями в России и почти полностью его субсидировал.

Был женат на Расе Давидовне Дыниной — дочери содержателя почтовой станции в городе Орша. Семья занимала старинный дом в Петербурге на ул. Галерной, 53. В 1872 году, вслед за своим сыном Горацием, Евзель Гинцбург получил от великого герцога Гессенского Людвига III баронский титул; в 1874 году Александр II разрешил потомственное пользование этим титулом в России.

На момент проведения выкупной операции владел селом Валя Цареградулуй (ныне Цариград) в Сорокском уезде Бессарабской губернии

В браке Евзеля и Расси Гинцбургов родились 4 сына: в 1831 г. — Зискинд (Александр), в 1833 г. — Нафтали-Герц (Гораций, Горас, Орас, Герцык, Герцель), в 1840 г. — Ури (Ур, Урий, Уриэль), в 1848 г. — Соломон-Давид и в 1844 г. — дочь Хая-Матлея (Хася, Хана, Ева-Матильда), в замужестве Фульд.

В разное время семья жила в Витебске, Киеве, Звенигородке и Каменец-Подольске.

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Baron Joseph von Günzburg's Timeline

1812
January 16, 1812
Vitebsk, Vitebsk District, Vitebsk Region, Belarus
1831
1831
1833
February 8, 1833
Zonigorodka, Kiev, Russian Empire
1840
1840
Paris, Île-de-France, France
1844
July 21, 1844
Kamenets Podolsky, Oekraine
1848
September 4, 1848
Kamianets-Podilskyi (Kamenetz), Ukraine
1878
January 2, 1878
Age 65
Paris, France