In 1820 Anselm Salomon's father Salomon Mayer had established a bank company at Vienna, financing the building of the Austrian
Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway in the 1830s. He had been a confidant of Chancellor Prince
Klemens von Metternich and also a discreet lender of the
Bohemian and
Hungarian nobility. Upon his death in 1855, his son and heir Anselm created the
k.k. privilegierte Österreichische Credit-Anstalt für Handel und Gewerbe, which evolved to the largest bank of the
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Anselm himself gradually retired from the banking business in the 1860s and participated in the
Austrian Southern Railway company. He rejected the
Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and refused to accommodate any side with money. As a philanthropist, he founded the Vienna
Rothschild Hospital in 1869. He was also a prominent art collector,
honorary citizen, and an appointed member of the Austrian
House of Lords from 1861. He died in Vienna. He began the art collection that his son Ferdinand bequeathed in 1898 to the
British Museum as the
Waddesdon Bequest, collecting mostly metalwork, especially of the Northern Renaissance. The
Holy Thorn Reliquary was one of his purchases. His collection was catalogued and partly photographed by the art historian
Franz Schestag in 1866 and 1872. ==References==