Background
Joseph Anton Maffei was born in Munich, the son of an Italian tradesman from Verona. His father came to Munich in order to run a tobacco wholesale business, that Joseph Anton Maffei continued.
Joseph Anton Maffei was born in Munich, the son of an Italian tradesman from Verona. His father came to Munich in order to run a tobacco wholesale business, that Joseph Anton Maffei continued.
Together with Joseph von Baader (1763–1835) and Baron Theodor Freiherr von Cramer-Klett (1817–1884), Maffei was one of the three most important railway pioneers in Bavaria. The Palazzo Maffei still stands today on the Piazza delle Erbe. In 1835 Maffei was one of the founding shareholders of the Bavarian Mortgage and Discount Bank (Bayerische Hypothekenund Wechselbank).
In 1836 Maffei founded the locomotive firm of J. A. Maffei in the English Garden in Munich.
His desire was to make Bavaria competitive in the field of industrial engines. From small beginnings, a locomotive factory of world renown arose.
Maffei, amongst others, also championed the construction of the railway line from Munich to Augsburg and supported Johann Ulrich Himbsel in building the private railway from Munich to Starnberg. In 1864 the 500th locomotive was delivered.
Joseph Anton Ritter von Maffei died on 1 September 1870.
His grave may still be found today at the Old Southern Cemetery (Alter Südfriedhof) in Munich. The locomotive works he founded survived him by some 60 years, but in 1930 J. A. Maffei went bankrupt and was amalgamated with the firm of Krauss in 1930 to form Krauss-Maffei. Today, Villa Maffei in Feldafing (on Lake Starnberg) houses a museum and exhibitions.
The surname von Maffei or Maffei is a patronymic name derived from the personal name Matthäus (German).
In ancient times the Maffei family settled in Verona from Germany.