Giovanni Battista Serpieri ΙΩΑΝΝΗΣ ΒΑΠΤΙΣΤΗΣ ΣΕΡΠΙΕΡΗΣ
Born in 1832 in Rimini
Died
in 1897 in Athens
Giovanni Battista Serpieri was
the first foreign ‘mega-entrepreneur’ to invest in Greece. He was demonized
almost immediately after he had invested fifteen million drachmas to gain the
concession to re-open the Lavrion Mines, the same mines that had made ancient
Athens an economic powerhouse. (1) Led by
Epaminondas Deligiorgis (Επαμεινώνδας Δεληγεώργης),
the opposition in the Greek parliament raised
questions about the legality of his concession. Journalists filled the newspapers of the day
with endless articles and analyses and, as the debate gained critical mass, inflated and fantastical financial
expectations about the mine’s potential began to circulate. Many began to
believe that the Lavrion mines could make every single citizen wealthy forever
– if only they were in Greek hands!
In the
end, the Lavrion ‘question’ would create hard feelings internationally and cause internal political instability.
His Life:
Giovanni
Serpieri was the oldest child of Enrico Serpieri. Like his father, he was a
metallurgical engineer. The family had extensive mining interests in Italy. Giovanni
married Clemence Leboyl and, through this marriage, gained a connection with the Banking House of Roux Frassinet
and Company.
Giovanni began his career in
Marseilles but came to Athens because the
possibilities of mining in Lavrion had been brought to his attention(2). In 1864 he
founded the company Roux - Serpieri - Fressynet in order to
mine the silver-lead of Lavrion.
This concession included the right to mine the
tailings from the ancient mines, or so Serpieri believed.
Lavrion became one of the most
important industrial installations in Greece at that time, with multiple facilities including blast
furnaces, metal works, chemistry laboratories, and various storerooms.
In 1867, there were 1,200 employees.
The Lavrion ‘Question’ and the Rumors
The issue arose when the
Koumoundouros government, pressed by opposition members of parliament (especially
Epaminondas Deligiorgis),
questioned the legality of the extraction of ore from the ancient slag heaps which
lay on the surface. In 1870 parliament passed a law forbidding Serpieri from exploiting this ore until a final decision
could be made.
Serpieri refused to stop
mining the slag and requested the arbitration of the Italian and the French
governments. They took the company’s side and asked for damages. All the while,
the relationship between Greece and France and Greece and the rest of Europe
deteriorated.
The French Government took
measures:
a)
They left the
chair of the French Ambassador to Greece empty.
b)
They passed
a new law affecting shipping. New taxes were levied on goods carried by foreign
flagged ships coming from a third port and then on to France. These new taxes detrimentally
affected Greek ships picking up grain in Russia, Romania and Egypt, and then
transporting it on to France .
At the same time, the affair contributed
to a political crisis in Greece with many resignations and changes of government
(from Koumoundouros to Zaimis to Boulgaris and then to Deligiorgis).
The Solution
At the kings’ request, Andreas Syngros, as representative of the Bank of Constantinople, reached an agreement
with Serpieri in February of 1873. Negotiations ended in an agreement in which the
company came into Greek hands and was renamed The Lavrion Metallurgical Company. (Serpieri was not left empty handed; he
formed another joint French-Hellenic company named “Mines of Kamariza”.)
.
|
Almost immediately, the Lavrion Metallurgical Company issued stocks with a
face value of 200 Francs.
A stock certificate from 1873 of the Lavrion
Metallurgical Company
|
The rumors about the mines and
the fact that the bank was supporting the new company led thousands of Greeks to buy shares and the rush to buy caused the
price to skyrocket. As time passed and
expectations proved unfounded, the price of the stock plummeted. In February
1874, Deligiannis was forced to resign as Prime
Minister because he was blamed for the fiasco(3).
The Hellenic company did well, even building a railway from the center of Athens to Lavrion after 1885. (4)
The Hellenic company did well, even building a railway from the center of Athens to Lavrion after 1885. (4)
Serpieri remained in Greece, remained wealthy, and
built an impressive mansion that still exists on Panepistimiou Street in the
center of Athens.
It was built between 1880 and 84 by Anastasios
Theofilas. It was later bought by the Agricultural Bank of Greece. It is
typical of the houses of wealthy merchants in this era. Business was
conducted downstairs and the family living quarters were above. Notice the
carriage entrance at the right.
|
He retained his interest in
Greek mining. A statue of Serpieri by Giorgios Vroutos, still stands today in
a square in Lavrion:
Wikipedia Commons
.
|
A rare blue hydrated sulphate
mineral was named especially for him:
Sepierite
The Family Grave
His Grave is one of the most elegant
and well cared for in the First Cemetery.
Georges Lemaire
Only recently was the
signature of the sculptor revealed (up and to the right on the bas relief) on
the family tomb. His name was Georges Lemaire.
Map
Section One, Number 271
Footnotes
(1)
Serpieri was
able to use modern methods to extract metals from the ore left over from the
many ancient mines in the area.
(2)
Apparently he had seen ballast from a ship that had been loaded it in the Lavrion
port and realized it was pure Smithsonite (zinc
carbonate). He was also apparently aware
of a report written by a Greek metallurgist named Kordelas stating that the old
silver mines had potential.
(3)
According to the book Entrepreneurship and Growth: an International Historical Perspective (p.54). The court case against Serpieri and the subsequent Lavrion ‘bubble’ significantly retarded the
development of joint stock companies in Greece at a critical time in Greece’s nascent
efforts to industrialize.
Sources
1. Παπαδοπούλου
Ελίζα Κριτική μιας αναστήλωσης: Μέγαρο Σερπιέρη και Πανεπιστημίου Εδουάρδου Λω http://library.tee.gr/digital/techr/2004/techr_2004_ii_1_2_49.pdf
2."Ο Χαρταετός" της Αθηνά Κακούρη, Εστία
3. Entrepreneurship and Growth: an International Historical Perspective by Gabriel Tortella, Gloria Quiroga, ( on
Kindle and Amazon)
4. If you walk two and one half blocks down September 3rd Street from Omonia Square, you will still find a small square named Lavrion Square. the was the terminal of the long gone railway that was once the pride of Athens.
4. If you walk two and one half blocks down September 3rd Street from Omonia Square, you will still find a small square named Lavrion Square. the was the terminal of the long gone railway that was once the pride of Athens.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου