Karl Wittgenstein
Karl Wittgenstein (born 8 April 1847 in Gohlis, died 20 January 1913 in Vienna) is an Austrian industrialist, owner of a steel cartel, father of Ludwig Wittgenstein, patron of art. Curriculum vitae He was from a family of German Jews Mayer, who moved to Vienna in the first half of the nineteenth century, went to Protestantism and began to use the name Wittgenstein. Father Karl was Hermann Christian, who married in 1839 with Fanny Fidgor. Karl completed his engineering studies and gained enormous fortune in the steel industry. In 1873 he married Leopoldine Kallmus, with whom he had eight children. Since 1898 he has devoted himself exclusively to charity and became a patron of artists. In 1898, the exhibition Pavilion of Secession for the Vereinigung bildender Künstler Österreichs - Secession founded by Gustav Klimt and Koloman Moser was created. The pavilion was designed by Josef Olbrich. In his palace, the most eminent Viennese musicians of that time sang.
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