Born in
London, England, he was the third and youngest of the three sons of
Leopold de Rothschild (1845–1917) and
Marie Perugia (1862–1937). A part of the prominent
Rothschild banking family of England, he was educated at
Harrow School and the
University of Cambridge where he secured a
Double First in
history. At the outbreak of
World War I Anthony de Rothschild and his brother
Evelyn joined the
British Army. While serving with the
Buckinghamshire Yeomanry, Anthony was wounded during the
Battle of Gallipoli but brother Evelyn died of combat injuries suffered at the 1917
Battle of Mughar Ridge. On 5 December 1920, Captain Anthony de Rothschild unveiled the War Memorial in the churchyard of All Saints Church at
Wing, Buckinghamshire honoring his brother and his Wing comrades killed in World War I. Leopold de Rothschild died in early 1917 and the following year when the War ended, Anthony became one of the managing partners of the family's
N M Rothschild & Sons banking house in London. Anthony inherited
Ascott House in
Ascott, Buckinghamshire. Anthony de Rothschild was a major force in not only British finance but internationally as well. With brother Lionel having more interest in developing his
Exbury Gardens than banking, under Anthony's direction, in 1953
N M Rothschild & Sons led a syndicate that formed the
British Newfoundland Development Corporation to undertake mineral exploration in
Labrador,
Canada and to develop the
Churchill Falls hydro-electric station. Anthony de Rothschild retired as head of the
N M Rothschild & Sons banking house in 1961 and was succeeded by his son,
Evelyn de Rothschild, who became chairman in 1976. He was active in preserving records of his family until his death. Among his legacies is the Anthony de Rothschild Prize in Surgery and the 1996 gift by his son of the Anthony de Rothschild Building, home of the Buckingham Business School and the Department of Economics and International Studies at the
University of Buckingham. The Anthony de Rothschild Lecture Theatre, at
St Mary's Campus,
Imperial College School of Medicine in London is named in his honour. ==Philanthropy==