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Lord Rothschild, a member of the famous banking family, on charity, celebrity and sitting for Lucian Freud

May 13, 2010 10:13
The Rothschild family home, Waddesdon Manor, is like a French chateau set down in the Buckinghamshire countryside . Now owned by the National Trust, 350,000 people visit it every year

By Julia Weiner , Julia Weiner

5 min read

A few miles along the A41, north of Aylesbury, lies a stretch of pretty English countryside that used to be home to the most famous Jewish family in Britain. It was here that Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild bought an estate in 1874 and built Waddesdon Manor, a magnificent Renaissance-style chateau. He chose the location because four of his uncles and cousins had properties nearby - a concentration of family members which led to area being dubbed "Rothschildshire".

None of the family lives at Waddesdon Manor any more and the building is now owned by the National Trust - last year it was the organisation's third most visited property. But Waddesdon Manor is managed by a Rothschild family trust, and head of that trust is Lord Jacob Rothschild. "I came here for the first time when I was 21, when Waddesdon was being handed over to the NT," he says. "Then my late cousin Dorothy asked me to be a trustee of the house."

When Dorothy died in 1988, she left Lord Rothschild the rest of the estate as well as the responsibility of continuing her work of managing the manor. He chose not to move into the house. "It is too big. And with 350,000 visitors a year it would not be an easy house to live in." He instead lives nearby at Eythrope in a home built for Baron Ferdinand's sister, Alice.

Since he took over, Lord Rothschild has overseen the restoration of the house begun by his cousin, and has acquired important additions to its renowned collection of art treasures - a collection that has its origins in much humbler circumstances.