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French-Jewish banker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Count Louis Raphaël Cahen d'Anvers (24 May 1837 – 20 December 1922) was a French banker.
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (July 2019) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Born in 1837 as the son of Meyer Joseph Cahen d'Anvers and Clara Bischoffsheim (1810–1876), he was a scion of two wealthy Jewish banking families.[1] He married Louise de Morpurgo, who was from a wealthy Sephardi Jewish family from Trieste.
Two of their daughters, Alice (1876–1965) and Elisabeth (1874–1944 KZ Auschwitz), were painted by Pierre-Auguste Renoir in Pink and Blue in 1881. Alice married Major General Sir Charles Townshend and was the grandmother of Belgian-American journalist Arnaud de Borchgrave.[2][3]
A third daughter, Irène (1872–1963), was the subject of a Renoir painting entitled Little Irène in 1880. Louis was so dissatisfied with the painting that he hung it in the servants' quarters and delayed payment of only 1500 francs.[4] Irène married Moïse de Camondo in 1891 and divorced in 1902. During the Nazi occupation of France, Irène survived by escaping to a villa in the south of France. Her daughter, Béatrice, was murdered in the Auschwitz concentration camp.[5]
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