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Charlotte and Lionel: A Rothschild Marriage
 
 

Charlotte and Lionel: A Rothschild Marriage (Hardcover)

by Stanley Weintraub (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Ltd; First edition edition (3 Feb 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0743219910
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743219914
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 15.4 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 173,607 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review

To be a member of the House of Rothschild was to be super-rich, and the word 'Rothschild' itself has become a metaphor for ultimate wealth. As far as Victorian England was concerned, 'Rothschild' was, crucially, its financial backbone - it was Rothschild money that purchased for the Disraeli government a controlling interest in the Suez canal - Britain's so-called 'Key of India'; Rothschild's courier service delivered Queen Victoria's most private correspondence and Prince Albert was able to borrow money discreetly from the Rothschild coffers. But, as Weintraub's impressively researched dual biography illustrates, to be rich and Jewish in 19th-century high society was a mixed blessing. Lionel de Rothschild was England's leading financier yet it took over a decade's struggle to overcome resistance to his faith and be allowed election as an MP. His bride Charlotte, regarded as a great beauty and one of the top society hostesses, was consistently refused acknowledgement by Victoria. Yet by comparison with dull, angst-ridden dinners at Buckingham Palace and Windsor, the tables at the Rothschild's Piccadilly and Gunnersbury houses were highly sought after for their glitter and elegance. Weintraub is a gifted chronicler of eminent Victorians - Disraeli, Victoria and Prince Albert among them - and his account of this much admired and influential couple reveals them to be an integral part of the political and social drama in Victorian England. Readers will find little in the way of the juicy scandal or notoriety that usually attends the overprivileged but will be refreshed to discover how a loving union and a generous social conscience overcame life's minor tragedies and ensured that its triumphs were not without significance. (Kirkus UK)

Popular Victorian biographer Weintraub (Edward the Caresser, 2001, etc.) returns with a languid account of a dynastic marriage between cousins in the famous banking family. Though they were friends of Disraeli, Thackeray, and Trollope, bankers to the Queen, rivals of Midas and Croesus, Lionel and Charlotte Rothschild belonged to a group that Victorian England strove mightily to keep in the background. As Jews, the Rothschilds were denied official political roles in England despite their enormous financial sway across Europe. Weintraub (Arts and Humanities Emeritus/Penn. State Univ.) wishes here to place them in the foreground, and a minor strength of this strangely limp account is the narrative of Lionel Rothschild's 11-year struggle to take his seat in the House of Commons. (His constituents repeatedly elected him, but the gentile Commons would not permit a Jew to be seated, nor would Rothschild agree to take the explicitly Christian oath.) Although the subtitle suggests a "love story," its focus is often elsewhere. Yes, we are given details of their betrothal: he was 27, she was 16, they were first cousins, and the marriage was arranged. We hear about their wedding in 1836 and about the extremely painful abscess on the buttocks that killed Lionel's father. We hear as well about the births and childhoods and struggles of the couple's various children. But the allure of the astonishing Rothschild fortune is too powerful for Weintraub to combat, and so we hear ever less about love and ever more about the Rothschilds' astonishing homes, their priceless collections of furniture and art, their travels, their soirees (Tom Thumb performed at one), their famous friends, the financial decisions that affected nations, wars, and monarchs. Then we watch them decline: Lionel suffered horribly from arthritis, and both eventually succumbed to strokes. An unfortunate demonstration that, at least in this case, the people who lend are not nearly so interesting as those who borrow. (Kirkus Reviews)


Rabbi Julia Neuberger

'Touching ... Weintraub has portrayed their lives in vivid and compelling detail. A highly enjoyable read'

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent read, Facinating Insight, 25 April 2009
Very interesting read regarding the life of The Rothchilds One branch of the family the London based Rothschilds and their siblings.

Money, power, houses, politics its all in here. Very enjoyable and informative.

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