Jacob Valero (1813–1874) was the founder of the first private bank in Palestine, Jacob Valero & Company.
In 1839, Jacob (Ya'akov) Valero appeared in Jewish communal records as a ritual slaughterer of the Sephardi community in Jerusalem. In 1849, he was described as a "talmid hakham" (scholar). In 1835, his profession was listed as "moneychanger." He opened his bank in 1848 in the Old City of Jerusalem and managed it until his death.[1] The Valero Bank financed the building of a railway from Jaffa to Jerusalem.[2]
The Bank financed the building of the Prince Sergei Hostel in the Russian Compound and handled the money for Kaiser Wilhelm's grand entrance into Jerusalem in 1898.[3]
Valero was an Ottoman subject until 1860, and then became a subject of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The bank closed in 1915.[4]
See also
- Chaim Aharon Valero, son of Jacob Valero.
- Aaron Valero, great-grandson of Jacob Valero. Israeli physician and educator.
References
- ↑ Glass and Kark, "Sephardi Entrepreneurs in Jerusalem-The Valero Family 1800-1948"
- ↑ "Post boxes and Power in Jerusalem". Parallel Histories. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
- ↑ "Post boxes and Power in Jerusalem". Parallel Histories. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
- ↑ Glass and Kark, "Sephardi Entrepreneurs in Jerusalem-The Valero Family 1800-1948"
Bibliography
- "Guide to Palestine and Egypt" by Macmillan & Co, (Page 15) Published 1901.
- Simon Sebag Montefiore Jerusalem The Biography (2011) Page 344,360. W&N (Orion) London. ISBN 0-297-85265-5