Franz Burda (24 February 1903 – 30 September 1986) was a German publisher. He inherited his father's publishing business, which he developed into what is now the Hubert Burda Media conglomerate.
He developed his family's small printing business into a large media conglomerate.Peter Köpf: Die Burdas. Europa Verlag Berlin, Hamburg 2002, , p. 42. He benefited from "Aryanization" of Jewish property by the Nazi government when in 1938 Burda and partners acquired Großdruckerei, Papiergroßhandlung und Papierwarenwerk Akademiestraße Gebrüder Bauer in Mannheim. Its owner Berthold Reiss and fellow shareholders were Jews, and so they were forced to sell the business under Nazi "Aryanization" laws.
After the acquisition, Burda invited Reiss to stay on at the company to help manage the transition. Reiss’s son Hans Reiss would later write that the pair established a good working relationship, despite the circumstances of the acquisition. Burda interjected on Reiss' behalf when the latter was interned as part of Kristallnacht. The Burda and Reiss families developed a friendship after 1945.
Burda Draft evasion himself by obtaining a contract printing maps for the military and using his connections. His antisemitic views were also alleged in the 1950s.Andreas Lörcher: Antisemitismus in der öffentlichen Debatte der späten fünfziger Jahre. Mikrohistorische Studie und Diskursanalyse des Falls Zind. Dissertation, University of Freiburg, 2008, p. 158.
Burda died in Offenburg at the age of 83 after relinquishing control of Hubert Burda Media to his three sons.
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