Böhmische Union Bank
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The Böhmische Union-Bank (BUB, Czech: Česká banka Union) was a bank based in Prague, founded in 1872. One of the main commercial banks in interwar Czechoslovakia, it was associated with the country's German and Jewish communities. It was aryanized in March 1939, nationalized without compensation in October 1945, and subsequently liquidated.
The BUB had its head office from the start on the prestigious Na příkopě thoroughfare in central Prague, Nos.958-959, in a neoclassical building erected in the 1830s. In 1929, it demolished a building in the same block (No.574) to erect a more modern facility, but that project never came to fruition.[2]
The Böhmische Union-Bank was established by conversion of the former Prague branch of Vienna-based Union-Bank, itself formed recently by merger, into a stand-alone institution on 20 February 1872.[3]: 120 The initial capital was 10 million Austro-Hungarian guldens.[3]: 122 The BUB was soon involved into the short-lived Crédit foncier für das Königreich Böhmen, but that venture was wound up in 1874 following the panic of 1873.[3]: 121, 129 Also in 1874, BUB acquired two other Prague-based banks founded in 1872, the Böhmischer Sparverein and Böhmische Handels-, Gewerbe- und Realitätenbank. In 1888, it took over the operations of liquidated Reichenberger Bank in present-day Liberec.
By 1914, the BUB had 23 branches and branch offices in Cisleithania: 15 in the Czech lands with a concentration in the Sudetenland (present-day Bielsko, Brno, Broumov, Dvůr Králové nad Labem, FrýdekJablonec nad Nisou, Krnov, Liberec, Nový Jičín, Olomouc, Opava, Rumburk, Šumperk, Vrchlabí, and Žatec), and 8 further south in Celje, Dornbirn, Graz, Klagenfurt, Leoben, Linz, Salzburg, and Villach.[3]: 165
In Czechoslovakia
Following World War I and the collapse of Austria-Hungary, BUB had to give up its branches outside the newly formed territory of Czechoslovakia.[3]: 324-325 Still, it was one of the largest financial institutions in the country, and the largest associated with the German community. In 1920, Banca Commerciale Italiana acquired a stake in BUB.[4] That same year, BUB opened a new branch in Ostrava in the Kraus villa,[5] and in 1928 it acquired the small Varnsdorf Bank in Varnsdorf.[3]: 356 Like other Czechoslovak banks, it was severely affected by the European banking crisis of 1931. It subsequently absorbed the Allgemeiner Böhmischer Bank-Verein which had been formed in 1921 from the former operations of Wiener Bankverein on Czechoslovak territory.[6]: 166
In 1937, BUB had 34 branches, mainly in the German-speaking border areas and large industrial cities with a high concentration of German-speaking population; of these, only one was in Slovakia (in Bratislava). 23 of these were lost following the Munich Agreement in 1938,[3]: 325 and taken over by Deutsche Bank.[7]: 95