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  1. Paul Mendelssohn Bartholdy (born Paul Felix Abraham Mendelssohn Bartholdy; 18 January 1841, Leipzig – 17 February 1880, Berlin) was a German chemist and a pioneer in the manufacture of aniline dye. He co-founded the Aktien-Gesellschaft für Anilin-Fabrikation (AGFA), a German chemical company.

  2. Paul Robert Ernst von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (born 14 November 1875 in Berlin; died 10 May 1935) was a German Jewish banker and art collector. The persecution of his family under the Nazis has resulted in numerous lawsuits for restitution.

  3. After a year of voluntary military service (1863/64), Mendelssohn Bartholdy joins the staff of a research laboratory, where he becomes acquainted with the newly emerging field of organic chemistry. Here he also gets to know the fellow chemist who later becomes his business partner, Carl Alexander Martius.

  4. Paul Mendelssohn Bartholdy the Eider the Fouder ∗ The Mendelssohn family, whose members for generations have regarded themselves as a Jewish, Prussian, and German family, by now has grown into an international, multi-confessional clan that has Jewish and Prussian roots in Germany.

  5. In 2004 relatives of the banker Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1875–1935), led by his great-nephew Julius H. Schoeps (born 1942), tried to reclaim paintings once owned by him and later sold in the 1940s by his widow, in breach of his will. [3] Mendelssohn family. Descendants of Moses Mendelssohn.

  6. Abraham Mendelssohn takes on the additional surname of Bartholdy upon his conversion to Christianity in 1822. His four children, whom he already had baptized in 1816, see themselves as loyal Prussian subjects and adherents to the Lutheran state religion.

  7. The German couple Paul and Charlotte von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy amassed an important art collection in the early decades of the twentieth century. They were early adopters of avant-garde trends such as Cubism, and their patronage also extended to modern architecture and applied arts.