- The
Camondo Stairs (Turkish:
Kamondo ****ivenleri) are Art Nouveau-style
stairs in the
Galata district of Istanbul, Turkey. The stairs,
completed in the...
- The
Camondo family was a
prominent Jewish family of
financiers and
philanthropists who were
active in
Europe and the
Ottoman Empire. The
Camondo family...
- The École
Camondo is a five-year
private school of
product design and
interior architecture located in Paris, France,
which was
created in 1944 and was...
- The Musée
Nissim de
Camondo is a
historic house museum of
French decorative arts
located in the Hôtel Moïse de
Camondo at 63, rue de Monceau, on the edge...
-
Salomon Camondo (1781,
Istanbul – 30
March 1873, Paris) was a
Jewish Ottoman-Italian
financier and philanthropist, and the
patriarch of the
Camondo family...
- de
Camondo (15
March 1860 – 14
November 1935) was an
Ottoman Empire-born
French banker and art collector. He was a
member of the
prominent Camondo family...
-
Nissim de
Camondo (23
August 1892 – 5
September 1917) was a
French military officer and a
member of the
prominent Camondo family. Born in Boulogne-Billancourt...
-
Abraham Salomon Camondo, is also
located on
Bankalar Caddesi. The
seaside mansion of the
Camondo family, po****rly
known as the
Camondo Palace (Kamondo...
-
Count Isaac de
Camondo (born 3 July 1851 in Istanbul; died 7
April 1911 in Paris) was a
member of the
House of
Camondo,
noted primarily as an art collector...
- d'Anvers, she
married Count Moïse de
Camondo in 1891, aged 19. They
separated in
August 1897
after her
affair with de
Camondo's stable master,
Count Charles Sampieri...