Waikato Times

Financial adviser to the Queen presided over London branch of banking dynasty

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Evelyn de Rothschild, who has died aged 91, helped unite the British and French arms of his family’s famous banking group and counted Queen Elizabeth II among those who sought his financial advice.

Starting in 1976, Rothschild served 27 years as chairman of N.M. Rothschild & Sons, the London branch of the financial dynasty started by his great-great-great-grandfathe­r in the late 18th century. Among its many other roles, the bank known today as Rothschild & Co. helped to finance the Duke of Wellington’s victory over Napoleon in 1815 at the battle of Waterloo.

Before stepping down in 2003, he achieved a longplanne­d goal of bringing together the London business with its

French counterpar­t, Rothschild &

Compagnie Banque. That was seen as a key step in remaining competitiv­e with much younger – but also bigger – multinatio­nal banks. ‘‘The first important strength of the family is unity,’’ he told the New York Times in 1996, as he and his cousin, David de Rothschild, head of the French house, announced their new partnershi­p.

From 1972 to 1989 he was chairman of the Economist magazine, which, in a 2002 interview with Bloomberg News, he called ‘‘probably the most independen­t publicatio­n in the world’’.

The Rothschild firm was founded by Mayer Amschel, who started out buying and selling old coins in a Frankfurt ghetto. He took the family surname from the red shield – ‘‘rote Schild’’ in German – that was displayed above an ancestor’s house in the 1560s.

In the early 1800s, he sent his five sons to establish bases in London, Paris, Naples, Vienna and Frankfurt. London-based N.M. Rothschild carries the name of Nathan Mayer Rothschild, Evelyn’s great-great-grandfathe­r.

The family’s influence waned in the 20th century because European government­s relied on American banks to finance both world wars against Germany. After World War II, Evelyn and his cousin Jacob refashione­d N.M. Rothschild as a British merchant bank, which arranged internatio­nal bond deals for such countries as Chile and Hungary.

The pair had a highly publicised split in 1980 over Jacob’s push to merge with S.G. Warburg & Co., in the hopes of expanding internatio­nally and competing with Wall Street firms. When Evelyn refused, Jacob quit and founded an offshoot investment vehicle, RIT Capital Partners.

‘‘The preservati­on of family control took precedence over expansion,’’ British historian Niall Ferguson wrote in his second volume on the Rothschild clan. ‘‘It was a serious rift within the English branch of the family.’’

For his part, Evelyn rebuilt N.M.

‘‘I know quite a lot about certain things, but I’m not a lawyer, I’m not an engineer,

I’m not an accountant. But that doesn’t stop you from using your common sense.’’

Rothschild by hiring a series of well-connected bankers. His friendship with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher helped the bank win the job of lead underwrite­r in the sales of shares in state-owned companies such as British Gas and British Petroleum.

He was knighted in 1989 by the Queen, for whom he was a financial adviser for many years. ‘‘No-one is tighter at spending than the Queen,’’ he told London’s Evening Standard in 2017. ‘‘She grew up during the war. Very discipline­d.’’

Evelyn Robert Adrian de Rothschild was the only son of Anthony Gustav de Rothschild and the former Yvonne Cahen d’Anvers. Evacuated to the relative safety of the United States during World War II, he returned to Britain to be educated first at Harrow School in London, then at Trinity College, Cambridge. He joined his family’s bank in 1957. He was part of its expansion into media and telecommun­ications, joining the boards of Beaverbroo­k Newspapers, the Economist and the Telegraph Group.

In the 2002 interview with Bloomberg News, he said of his job, ‘‘Every day something new pops up out of the woodwork and someone asks me if I can help. I don’t pretend to be a nuts and bolts person. I know quite a lot about certain things, but I’m not a lawyer, I’m not an engineer, I’m not an accountant. But that doesn’t stop you from using your common sense.’’

An art collector, wine connoisseu­r and owner of racehorses, who counted Bill and Hillary Clinton among his friends, Rothschild shuttled for many years between London and a country estate in Buckingham­shire acquired by his grandfathe­r in 1876 and decorated with porcelain from Asia and paintings by old masters.

His first marriage, to Jeannette Bishop, ended in divorce. With his second wife, Victoria Schott, he had three children. That marriage also ended in divorce. In 2000, he married Lynn Forester, co-founder of the telephone network company FirstMark Communicat­ions Europe. –

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Evelyn de Rothschild with the then Prince of Wales in 2015. As the late Queen’s financial adviser, he observed, ‘‘No-one is tighter at spending than the Queen.’’
GETTY IMAGES Evelyn de Rothschild with the then Prince of Wales in 2015. As the late Queen’s financial adviser, he observed, ‘‘No-one is tighter at spending than the Queen.’’

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