Deutsch-Asiatische Bank
The Deutsch-Asiatische Bank (DAB; simplified Chinese: 德华银行; traditional Chinese: 德華銀行; pinyin: Déhuá Yínháng) was a foreign bank in Asia, founded in 1889 in Shanghai. Its principal activity was trade financing, but together with English and French banks, it also played a role in the underwriting of bonds for the Chinese government, issuing the Kiautschou Dollar and financing of railway construction in China.
History
The Deutsch-Asiatische Bank was founded in the Shanghai International Settlement on 12 February 1889, at the initial initiative of the Disconto-Gesellschaft, and with the additional participation of all the other major German commercial banks of the time. Its initial capital, denominated in local taels, was divided between the Disconto-Gesellschaft (16.1 percent), Deutsche Bank (11.1 percent), S. Bleichröder (11.1 percent), Berliner Handels-Gesellschaft (9.4 percent), Jacob S.H. Stern (9.4 percent), Norddeutsche Bank (7.6 percent), Darmstädter Bank (6.2 percent), Mendelssohn & Co. (6.2 percent), M. A. Rothschild & Söhne (6.2 percent),[2]: 72–73 as well as Dresdner Bank, A. Schaaffhausen'scher Bankverein, and Nationalbank für Deutschland among others.[3]: 455 At the time, it was the first large non-British bank to enter the Chinese market.[4] Its general management (German: Vorstand) resided in Shanghai, while the supervisory board (German: Aufsichtsrat) met in Berlin.[5]
The bank soon set up branches in Tianjin (1890), Calcutta (1896), Hankou (1897), Qingdao (1897), Hong Kong (1899), Yokohama (1905), Beijing (1905), Kobe (1906), Singapore (1906), Jinan (1910), and Guangzhou (1910).[2]: 73 Until World War I, it developed a cooperative relationship with the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) against encroachments by competing foreign banks from France, Japan and Russia.[4]
In 1906, the bank received the concession to issue its own banknotes in China, denominated in Mexican dollars and in taels.[3]: 455
In 1914 at the start of World War I, the DAB's operations in Calcutta, Hong Kong and Singapore were promptly closed and liquidated by the British authorities. In Japan, the operations in Kobe and Yokohama came to a standstill in September 1916.[6] The branch in Tsingtau was plundered by the victorious Japanese army following the siege of the city in 1914, and was subsequently used to host the Japanese Consulate until World War II.[7] The rest of the DAB's Chinese network was closed by the Chinese government following China's entry into the war on 14 August 1917.[4] in early 1919, the branch in Shanghai was liquidated, with its prestige main building taken over by the Bank of Communications; the DAB only kept in branches in Beijing and Hankou from its previous Chinese network.[8]
The DAB's operations in Japan restarted in 1919, but the Yokohama branch was destroyed in the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. Following the normalization of relationships between China and Germany in the early 1920s, the DAB was able to restart activity in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hankou, Shanghai, and Tianjin, as well as the continued operations in Japan.[6]
The Deutsch-Asiatische Bank's activity in Berlin was terminated in 1945 by order of the Soviet occupation forces in Germany.[9] On 27 September 1945, the government of the Republic of China similarly took over the head office in Shanghai and confiscated the bank's Chinese assets without compensation. The branch in Hamburg, however, could continue some activity after only a few days' interruption in May 1945, even though it had no access to the main offices' documentation. The bank's total headcount in Germany and China correspondingly evolved, from 85 in 1939 to 8 in January 1949 and 21 at end-1952.[10] the bank's head office was formally relocated from Shanghai to Hamburg in June 1953.[11]
In 1972, together with partner banks within the EBIC group (European Banks' International Company), Deutsche Bank subsequently founded Europäisch-Asiatische Bank (also known as European Asian Bank or Eurasbank), which the former Deutsch-Asiatische Bank was merged into. Beside Deutsche, the shareholder banks included AMRO Bank (Netherlands), Banca Commerciale Italiana (Italy), Creditanstalt-Bankverein (Austria), Midland Bank (UK), Société Générale de Banque (Belgium), and Société Générale (France).[12] In 1986, the bank was renamed Deutsche Bank (Asia) after the partner banks sold their participations to Deutsche Bank. Between 1987 and 1988, it was then merged into Deutsche Bank.[13]
Buildings
The Deutsch-Asiatische Bank's branch in Shanghai opened at No. 14 Bund on 2 January 1890.[4] After World War I, the property was taken over by China's Bank of Communications, which in the 1940s replaced it with the still-standing Bank of Communications Building.
- Branch building in the Beijing Legation Quarter, 1900
- Branch building in Qingdao, 1901
- The same building in the early 2000s
- Branch building in Hankou, 1908
- Former branch building in Jinan, 2009
- Building at Rathausstrasse 7 in Hamburg (right, with flags above), the bank's head office from the early 1960s[14]
Banknotes
Like other foreign banks in China at the time, the Deutsch-Asiatische Bank issued paper currency in the concessions where it had established branch offices.
- 1 dollar local currency, Shanghai (1907)
- 1 dollar local currency, Qingdao (1907)
- 1 dollar local currency, Beijing (1907)
- 1 dollar local currency, Beijing (1907)
- 1 dollar local currency, Tianjin (1907)
- 1 dollar local currency, Tianjin (1907)
- 200 dollars local currency, Shanghai (1914)
- 200 dollars local currency, Shanghai (1914)
See also
- Banque de l'Indochine
- Yokohama Specie Bank
- Russo-Chinese Bank
- Banque Industrielle de Chine
- China Consortium
References
- ^ Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Geschäfts-Bericht für das Jahr 1939 (PDF)
- ^ a b P. Barrett Whale (1930), Joint Stock Banking in Germany: A Study of the German Creditbanks Before and After the War (PDF)
- ^ a b Jacob Riesser (1911), The German Great Banks and Their Concentration in connection with The Economic Development of Germany (PDF), Washington DC: National Monetary Commission
- ^ a b c d John E. Sandrock. "Foreign Banks in China, Part II - Imperial Chinese Issues (1900-1911)" (PDF). The Currency Collector.
- ^ Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Geschäfts-Bericht für das Jahr 1914 (PDF)
- ^ a b Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Geschäfts-Bericht über die Jahre 1915-1927 (PDF)
- ^ "Tsingtao - Tsingtau - Qingdao". An American in China: 1936-1939, A Memoir. Archived from the original on 31 August 2021. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
- ^ Ghassan Moazzin (2022), Foreign Banks and Global Finance in Modern China: Banking on the Chinese Frontier, 1870-1919, Cambridge University Press
- ^ "Ghassan Moazzin, "From Globalization to Liquidation: The Deutsch-Asiatische Bank and the First World War in China," Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review 16 (2015), 52-76" Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
- ^ Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Bericht für die Jahre 1940-1952 (PDF)
- ^ Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Geschäftsbericht für das Jahr 1953 (PDF)
- ^ Europäische-Asiatische Bank AG / European Asian Bank, Annual Report 1974 (PDF)
- ^ Deutsch Bank Archived 29 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Bankgeschichte.de (2 November 2004). Retrieved 11 January 2012.
- ^ Deutsch-Asiatische Bank, Geschäftsbericht für das Jahr 1961 (PDF)