Caroline Gotzens

Caroline Gotzens (born August 20, 1961 in Stein near Nuremberg as Caroline Elisabeth Renate Ottilie Gräfin von Faber-Castell (Countess of Faber-Castell) is an aristocratic German-Swiss industrial heiress. She is a family member of the Cologne-based banking dynasty Oppenheim, as well as of the Frankish pencil dynasty Faber-Castell.[1]

Caroline Gotzens
Born
Caroline Elisabeth Renate Ottilie Gräfin von Faber-Castell

(1961-08-20) 20 August 1961
Stein, Germany
NationalityGerman-Swiss
OccupationIndustrial heiress

Family

Gotzens is an 8th generation family member of the Cologne-based banking dynasty von Oppenheim, as well as 9th generation member of the Faber-Castell founding family. She grew up in Castle Klamm in Tyrol. The Countess never lived in the family castle. She is widely related to the princely families Castell-Castell and Castell-Rüdenhausen. Her sister Floria Princess of Hesse is married to the Head of the Hesse Foundation, Donatus Prince of Hesse.[2] She is married to Düsseldorf-based entrepreneur Dr Michael Gotzens.[3] The couple has three grown children.[4] Gotzens is the daughter of German billionaire Count Hubertus von Faber-Castell (died 2007) and Countess Liselotte Faber-Castell (née Baecker, born 1939 in Frankfurt). Her mother was married for the second time to famous Rhenish industrialist and sole owner of Hünnebeck, Hajo Hünnebeck.[5] After his death and the resulting sale of the company, a German court ruling against the beneficiaries was named after Hünnebeck. The case filled a loophole of legal tax evasion, due to exodus.[6][7] Hünnebeck is now part of the Harsco Corporation and generated 40% of its revenue in 2018.[8] Her father, Count Hubertus, brought commercial television to China and is the only European honorary citizen of Beijing.[9] Gotzens was with her grandparents, Roland Count of Faber-Castell and Countess Alix-May, a victim of constant anti-Semitic attacks because her grandmother was born into the German banking dynasty Oppenheim, which had Jewish roots.[10] The magazine Der Stürmer criticized her luxurious lifestyle and the words 'Die Oppenheim, das Judenschwein, muss raus aus Stein' (Oppenheim, the Jew-pig, has to leave Stone) were written on the family's castle.[11] In order to remain in control of the family’s bank, she and her cousins stayed in Germany.[12] Later, the Oppenheim family had to hide. Gotzens left with her grandmother to Switzerland.[13]

Collection

Her ancestors were famous for collecting art. After the division of the estate, Gotzens obtained ownership of many important pieces.[14] As heir to her grandmother Alix-May, Gotzens litigates in court to receive back the painting 'Die Malkunst' of Jan Vermeer. The painting was allegedly sold under duress by her step-grandfather to Adolf Hitler. The painting is estimated to be worth around 150 to 400 Million Euros and is regarded as the most expensive art piece in Austria.[15] Gotzens is the owner of one of the most important silver and jewellery collections in Germany. Most of the pieces are available to the public in various German museums. The entire private collection has been recorded by the Kunstmuseum Köln under the name "Ein rheinischer Silberschatz-Schmuck und Gerät aus Privatbesitz" (A Rhenish Silver Treasure - Jewellery and Appliances from Private Ownership).[16]

References

  1. "Roland Lothar Wolfgang Christian Ernst Wilhelm von Faber-Castell 1905-1978 - Ancestry®". Ancestry.com.
  2. "Hessen-Prinz heiratet Bleistift-Königin". 19 May 2003.
  3. "Grosso-Unternehmer Gotzens erhält Ehrennadel des Bundesverbandes Presse-Grosso". 18 April 2012.
  4. Haas-Pilwat, Dagmar (6 October 2013). "Erfolgreich angespitzt". Die Welt.
  5. "Lintorf: Hünnebeck – Stationen eines Welterfolgs". 25 March 2019.
  6. "EuGH, 08.06.2016 - C-479/14".
  7. "Lintorf: Hünnebeck – Stationen eines Welterfolgs". 25 March 2019.
  8. https://investors.harsco.com/static-files/f4c241cb-8be2-48a7-b9ee-d0eb83021159
  9. "Besondere Revolution". Der Spiegel. 22 March 1987.
  10. "Familie Oppenheim".
  11. "LA Opus".
  12. Hans Pohl, Wilhelm Treue (1983). Das Schicksal des Bankhauses Sal. Oppenheim jr. & Cie. im Dritten Reich (2 ed.). Cologne: Steiner Wiesbach. pp. 1–117. ISBN 3515038825. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  13. http://www.essentialvermeer.com/misc/VermeerAnalysis.pdf
  14. Effmert, Viola (2006). Sal Oppenheim jr. & Cie Kulturförderung im 19. Jahrhundert (1 ed.). Cologne: Böhlau. pp. 21–198. ISBN 3-412-25305-7. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  15. "Streit um Vermeer-Werk: Das von Hitler geliebte Bild". 15 February 2010.
  16. Rüdiger Joppien, Brigitte Klesse, Carl-Wolfgang Schümann, Hans Küpper (1980). Ein rheinischer Silberschatz-Schmuck und Gerät aus Privatbesitz (1 ed.). Cologne: Wienand. pp. 1–352. ISBN 3879091021. Retrieved 11 May 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

See also

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