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Samuel Schallinger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samuel Schallinger
Died1942
Occupation(s)Co-owner of the Imperial and the Bristol hotels in Vienna, Austria

Samuel Schallinger (died 1942) was an Austrian Jewish businessman.

Biography

Schallinger was an Austrian Jewish businessman who was co-owner of the Imperial and the Bristol hotels in Vienna, Austria, which today are still among the city of Vienna's grandest hotels.[1]

In 1938, the hotels underwent Aryanization and he was forced to sell his shares. He and his family were deported to Theresienstadt concentration camp near Prague, Czechoslovakia where they all died in 1942.[2][3]

Details of the property seized from Schallinger and other Austrian Jews under the Nazis, and names the famous beneficiaries who took them and never gave them back, are outlined in the book Unser Wien (Our Vienna) by Stephan Templ and Tina Walzer.[4]

References

  1. ^ Erlanger, Steven (March 7, 2002). "Vienna Skewered as a Nazi-Era Pillager of Its Jews". New York Times.
  2. ^ Spivak, Rhonda (October 14, 2014). "the Imperial Hotel-Where Hitler Stayed When In Vienna After the Anschluss". Winnipeg Jewish Review.
  3. ^ "SCHALLINGER SAMUEL: TODESFALLANZEIGE, GHETTO THERESIENSTADT". Nationalarchiv Prag; Institut Theresienstädter Initiative.
  4. ^ Connolly, Kate (May 21, 2002). "Vienna's tourist trail of plunder". The Guardian.

Further reading

  • Andreas Augustin, Bill Lorenz, Hotel Bristol, Vienna, The Most Famous Hotels In the World (2001)
This page was last edited on 24 February 2024, at 11:20
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