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Rudolf August Oetker (20 September 1916 – 16 January 2007) colloquially also R.A. Oetker was a German industrialist, businessman, ship owner and philanthropist. Most notably he turned Dr. Oetker , founded by his grandfather August Oetker , into a multinational food conglomerate.
Oetker's son Rudolf and his wife Ida had two children, Rudolf-August and Ursula; however, the senior Rudolf was later killed in the First World War. His widow Ida remarried Richard Kaselowsky, and they had four more children with Kaselowsky raising Rudolf-August and Ursula as his own. Kaselowsky became the manager of the company from 1920 to ...
Schweizer was born Roselie Oetker on 16 July 1940 in Hamburg, Nazi Germany (presently Germany), the oldest and only child of Rudolf August Oetker and his first wife Marlene Oetker (née Ahlmann). Her mother hailed from an industrial family that owned Carlshütte, an iron foundry with at times employed over 3,000 employees. [3]
Dr. Oetker became one of the symbols of the post-World War II recovery effort in the country. Oetker died in 2007. [11] In the post-war period, Kaselowsky was highly controversial in Bielefeld, especially regarding the naming of the Kunsthalle Bielefeld, co-financed by his stepson Rudolf August Oetker. While the Oetker family emphasized his ...
Oetker was born 26 May 1915 in Bielefeld, German Empire, the older of two children, to Rudolf Oetker (1889–1916) and Ida (née Meyer). Her father died during World War I in Verdun, shortly before her younger brother Rudolf August Oetker was born. From her father, she received a relatively meager inheritance in comparison to her brother.
Rudolf-Oetker-Halle in 2008. The Rudolf-Oetker-Halle (ROH) is the concert hall of Bielefeld, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It was built from 1928 to 1930 after designs by Düsseldorf architects Tietmann & Haake, opened on 31 October 1930. The listed monument is mostly in the original state and has excellent acoustics.
Rudolf August Oetker This page was last edited on 28 April 2019, at 14:41 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
When he endowed the building, Rudolf Oetker expressed a desire for it be called the Richard-Kaselowsky-Haus, after his stepfather. [1] Richard Kaselowsky was a controversial figure in Bielefeld due to his Nazi past, including membership in not only the NSDAP but also the Freundeskreis der Wirtschaft.