- Carl Melchior
Carl Melchior (1871 —
December 30 ,1933 ) was a German banker.Born in
Hamburg , Melchior studied law and eventually was appointed ajudge . In 1900 Melchior was made legal counsel to Hamburg banking concern,M.M.Warburg & CO DuringWorld War I , he served with aBavaria n regiment of theGerman army and was seriously injured atMetz when he fell from a horse. After his recovery, Mechior went to work for the German government and beginning in 1919 served as an advisor for the financial and economic negotiations that began at the Paris Peace Conference. Following implementation of the terms of theTreaty of Versailles , Germany was faced with numerous economic problems. By 1921, Melchior deemed it advisable for the country to accept what he saw as an impossiblewar reparations burden stating: "We can get through the first two or three years with the aid of foreign loans. By the end of that time foreign nations will have realised that these large payments can only be made by huge German exports and these exports will ruin the trade inEngland and America so that creditors themselves will come to us to request modification." [Lord D'Abernon. "An Ambassador of Peace" Vol. 1, p. 194. 1929.]Over the decade, Melchior played an increasingly prominent role in the lengthy negotiations, earning international recognition for his command of both the financial and legal issues involved.
After having been made a partner at M. M.Warburg & Co, Carl Melchior became one of the co-founders of the Hamburg Morocco Society, an entity created to promote German mining in
Morocco and expand economic activities in what was a country dominated by French business interests. In 1922, Melchior was appointed Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Hamburg based pharmaceutical-related consumer products giant Beiersdorf AG. His growing influence in the German economic community resulted in his 1926 appointment as the German representative on theLeague of Nations ' Finance Committee. In 1928, he was named Committee chairman and following its creation in 1930, he served as a member of the board of theBank for International Settlements inBasle, Switzerland . His work resulted in him becoming friends with British economistJohn Maynard Keynes .A bachelor for many years, Melchior eventually married his long-time mistress, the French romance novelist
Marie de Molènes with whom he had a child. In the last few years of his life, he suffered from severe heart problems and in December 1933 died following a stroke.In his memory, the Carl Melchior Chair for International Policy was established at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1984 and in 1999 the university created the Carl Melchior Minerva Center.References
*"The Warburgs : The Twentieth-Century Odyssey of a Remarkable Jewish Family" by Ron Chernow (ISBN 0-679-74359-6)
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