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Levy Barent Cohen (1747 – 1808) was a Dutch-born British financier and community worker. ... Hannah Cohen (1783–1850), married Nathan Mayer Rothschild.
Cohen was born on 25 May 1875 in Kensington, London, the daughter of Conservative politician Sir Benjamin Cohen (1844-1909) and Louisa Emily Merton (1850-1931), both of whom were great-grandchildren of Levy Barent Cohen (1747-1808), of whom The Jewish Encyclopedia says that "Through the distinguished marriages which his children contracted, nearly all the leading Jewish families in England are ...
On 22 October 1806 in London, he married Hannah Barent-Cohen (1783–1850), daughter of Levy Barent Cohen (1747–1808) and wife Lydia Diamantschleifer. Hannah Barent-Cohen was the aunt of Benjamin Frederik David Philips, the founder of Philips, and Karl Heinrich Marx. Hannah's sister, Judith Barent-Cohen, was the wife of Sir Moses Montefiore ...
Banker Nathan Meyer Rothschild (1777–1836) and his wife Hannah Rothschild (née Barent-Cohen, 1783–1850) [1] Business executive and intelligence operative Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild (1910–1990) [7] Judah Cohen (1768–1838), merchant and owner of numerous slave plantations in Jamaica [9]
Gibby Cohen, now 77, and his wife, Patti, were personal trainers long before it was even a thing. The duo opened their first training studio, Polygym, in New York City in the early 1980s and ...
He married Hannah Barent Cohen in 1806, with whom he had seven children (three daughters and four sons). Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744–1812), banker.
The bungalow in Woodwalton Fen, built by Rothschild in 1911 as a base for field trips. Rothschild is regarded as a pioneer of nature conservation in Britain, and is credited with establishing the UK's first nature reserve when (at the age of 22) he bought Wicken Fen, near Ely, in 1899. [5]
She was the second of the five children of Isaac Heymans Pressburg (1747–1832) and Nanette Salomons Cohen (1754–1833). [1] The Pressburgs were a prosperous family, with Isaac working as a textile merchant. They were prominent members of Nijmegen's growing Jewish community, [b] living first in Nonnenstraat then, when Henriette was 19, in ...