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http://johnlind.tripod.com/zi/zeissikonframe.html
Zeiss Ikon
Carl Zeiss Jena formed Zeiss Ikon in Dresden as a separate entity within the Foundation in 1926 by combining five camera companies: Ernemann, Contessa-Nettel (Contessa had previously merged with Nettel), Ica, and two Goerz works. This was accomplished under the direction of Emanuel Goldberg who headed Zeiss Ikon until he was kidnapped by Nazis in 1933 and forced to leave Germany. The Zeiss Ikon name had been used to market movie cameras from Ernemann (since 1913?) and the new Zeiss Ikon A.G. began making box cameras in 1926 using Carl Zeiss lenses. Shortly before the disappearance of Emanuel Goldberg, Zeiss Ikon entered into a partnership with several other companies to form Fernseh A.G. for the development of television. Prior to W.W.II, Zeiss Ikon was the European giant in photography and imaging and second only to Kodak in the U.S. Following W.W.II Zeiss Ikon restarted its Dresden manufacturing at the Stuttgart Contessa Works. There was a very short period of time prior to realization that the Soviet Sector would not be reunited with the other three sectors (U.S., French and British). Some manufacturing was done using surviving Dresden/Jena stockpiles of existing parts during 1947 (see Contax II/III below). The Soviets seized surviving Dresden and Jena manufacturing equipment and hauled it off to Kiev as part of war reparations. This resulted in the post-W.W.II Kiev clone of the Contax II/III (see Contax II/III and Contax IIa/IIIa below). Zeiss Ikon never reemerged as such in East Germany following W.W.II.