Eduard Kann ( Chinese: 耿愛德/闞恩, 1880–1962) was an Austrian banker and a specialist in Chinese numismatics. [1] His book The Currencies of China (1926) was "immediately the standard work on the subject of metallic currencies in China" [2]
Kann was born in Misslitz of Czech lands under Austria-Hungary. [3] [4] In 1902 he left Vienna to work for a London bank in China. He was employed by several banks, including the Russo-Asiatic Bank, the Banque Industrielle de Chine, and the Chinese-American Bank of Commerce, was stationed in Manchuria, then Tientsin (Tianjin) and became manager of the Commercial Guarantee Bank of Chihli. He was general manager of the Chinese-American Bank of Commerce from 1921. Between 1925 and 1949 he was an independent bullion broker in Shanghai, but interned by the Japanese (1941–42). After 1949 he taught briefly at Loyola University in Los Angeles, then retired to Hollywood. [5]
After his death, Kann's collections were sold:
FN 1. Petitioner testified that she and the decedent were born in Austria, but that the place where he was born "then became Czechoslovakia." When asked whether they retained their Austrian citizenship, she testified: "Yes. Our citizenship then was Czechoslovakian." She also testified that they remained citizens of Czechoslovakia until they became citizens of the United States. Apparently, the Czechoslovakian citizenship derived from the partition of the Austrian Empire in World War I.
Eduard Kann ( Chinese: 耿愛德/闞恩, 1880–1962) was an Austrian banker and a specialist in Chinese numismatics. [1] His book The Currencies of China (1926) was "immediately the standard work on the subject of metallic currencies in China" [2]
Kann was born in Misslitz of Czech lands under Austria-Hungary. [3] [4] In 1902 he left Vienna to work for a London bank in China. He was employed by several banks, including the Russo-Asiatic Bank, the Banque Industrielle de Chine, and the Chinese-American Bank of Commerce, was stationed in Manchuria, then Tientsin (Tianjin) and became manager of the Commercial Guarantee Bank of Chihli. He was general manager of the Chinese-American Bank of Commerce from 1921. Between 1925 and 1949 he was an independent bullion broker in Shanghai, but interned by the Japanese (1941–42). After 1949 he taught briefly at Loyola University in Los Angeles, then retired to Hollywood. [5]
After his death, Kann's collections were sold:
FN 1. Petitioner testified that she and the decedent were born in Austria, but that the place where he was born "then became Czechoslovakia." When asked whether they retained their Austrian citizenship, she testified: "Yes. Our citizenship then was Czechoslovakian." She also testified that they remained citizens of Czechoslovakia until they became citizens of the United States. Apparently, the Czechoslovakian citizenship derived from the partition of the Austrian Empire in World War I.