Flick family

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The Flick family is a wealthy German family with an industrial empire that formerly embraced holdings in companies involved in

Daimler AG
.

Nuremberg Trials. During the Second World War Flick's industrial enterprises used 48,000 forced labourers from Germany's concentration camps. Friedrich Flick
was pardoned 3 years later and received a full refund of the proceeds of crime paid, from the governments.

Friedrich Christian Flick, known as Mick Flick, is an art collector and grandson of Friedrich Flick.

History

Charlottenhütte

Charlottenhütte mining company, and he eventually became a co-owner. He became the company's Director-General in 1919. During the Weimar Republic
, he built an enormous industrial conglomerate.

War crimes

While originally a member of the right-wing liberal-nationalist German People's Party, Flick also supported the Nazi Party financially from 1933, and over the next ten years donated over seven million marks to the party.[1]

During the Second World War Flick's industrial enterprises used 48,000 forced labourers from Germany's concentration camps. It is estimated that 80 per cent of these workers died as a result of the way they were treated during the war. Flick was found guilty of war crimes at Nuremberg in 1947 and was sentenced to seven years in prison, but was pardoned 3 years after and resumed control over his industrial conglomerate, becoming the richest person in West Germany.

Controversies

The 1983

Flick Affair revealed that German politicians had been bribed to allow the Flick family to reduce its tax liabilities, and after becoming an Austrian citizen to further reduce his tax obligations, in 1985 Friedrich Karl Flick sold most of his industrial holdings to Deutsche Bank
for $2.5 billion (£1.4 billion), retiring until his 2006 death.

On Thursday November 20, 2008, it was reported that his body was stolen from a cemetery in Velden am Wörtersee, Austria.

Charitable donations

A German high school in Friedrich Flick's hometown was called the "Friedrich-Flick-Gymnasium" until September 2008. The contribution from Flick had made it possible to build this school in 1969. The Donatella Flick Conducting Competition is named for Princess Donatella Missikoff Flick, the wife of Gert Rudolph Flick.

Notable members

Children of Friedrich Flick

Other Flick family members:

  • Donatella Flick, born Princess Donatella Missikoff of Ossetia, socialite and philanthropist, former wife of Gert Rudolph Flick.
  • Gloria, Princess of Thurn and Taxis, Carl Alban, Count of Schönburg-Glauchau (real estate Investment advisor) and of the author Count of Schönburg-Glauchau.[4] She married Friedrich Christian Flick in Munich on August 29, 1985, has three children with him, and the couple were divorced in London on July 15, 1993. She lived in Surrey, England, and died in 2019.[4]

References and notes

  1. ^ Stallbaumer, L. M. "Frederick Flick's Opportunism and Expediency". Dimensions: A Journal of Holocaust Studies. Vol. 13, no. 12. Archived from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  2. ^ "Biografie von Friedrich Vitzthum von Eckstädt (1855-1936) - Sächsische Biografie | ISGV e.V." saebi.isgv.de. Retrieved 2023-04-16.
  3. ^ "Promotie" [Promotion]. Het Parool (in Dutch). 1988-10-27. Retrieved 2023-04-16 – via Delpher.
  4. ^ .

Further reading