Hermann Weil

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Born(1868-09-18)18 September 1868
Died3 October 1927(1927-10-03) (aged 59)
Frankfurt, Germany
SpouseRosa Weil
Hermann Weil
Hermann Weil (c. 1910)
Born(1868-09-18)18 September 1868
Died3 October 1927(1927-10-03) (aged 59)
Frankfurt, Germany
Known forGrain trader
Frankfurt University Institute for Social Research
SpouseRosa Weil
ChildrenFelix Weil

Hermann Weil (German: [vaɪl]; 18 September 1868 – 3 October 1927) was a German-Argentine businessman, who in the beginning of the 20th century was the biggest grain trader in the world. He was a patron of his hometown Steinsfurt in addition to the University of Frankfurt. He funded the Frankfurt University Institute for Social Research, which developed the Frankfurt School of Marxist thought and critical theory. He was the father of Felix Weil.[1]

He was the tenth of 13 children born in a Jewish family to his father Josef Weil (1823-1887) and mother Fanny. His family owned a livestock shop in Steinsfurt. After graduating from a Realschule in Sinsheim in 1883, Weil moved to Mannheim, the then center for European grain trade. He began an apprenticeship for the grain trader Isidor Weismann. He quickly rose in rank, and began conducting business for Weismann in Switzerland, Antwerp, and the Balkans.[2]

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