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Business and the family The Background There is evidence that a small number of Greek merchants were present in London from the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. They were mainly involved in the wine trade and there may have been some continuity of this practice into the modern period as noted in Chapter One,1 but it was nineteenth a new century entrepreneurial spirit Greek to merchants that the drew city. In the the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, British industrial growth, especially in textile manufacture, and her status as a burgeoning imperial power coincided with expansion in the world economy. Cain and Hopkins have argued the case for the economic impetus behind British imperial ambitions, and the creation of a new Greek community in London in the Victorian period developed in tandem with Britain’s increasing economic and political importance in the East, particularly within the Ottoman sphere of interest.2 Britain’s usurpation 1 Jonathan Harris, Greek Emigres in the West 1400 – 1520, Camberley, 1995, p. 87; Chapter One, p. 40; Terence Spencer, Fair Greece, Sad Relic, Athens, 1986, for historical connections with Crete and Chios, pp.25 - 8 2 P.J. Cain, and A.G., Hopkins, British Imperialism: Innovation and Expansion, 1688 – 1914, London, 1993, pp. 399 – 401; P.J. Cain, ‘Economics and Empire: The Metropolitan Context’, The Oxford History of 2 of France as the dominant European power in the Eastern Mediterranean created new opportunities which Greek merchant families were quick to seize. Their particular methods of business, as will be outlined in this chapter, were flexible enough to allow them to respond swiftly to changes and shift their bases of operations accordingly, so that in a short time, by mid-century, they were amongst the prime movers in London’s business world.3 When Victoria came to the throne, British foreign affairs were already under the influence of Palmerston, and in the first two decades of her reign he continued to pursue an aggressive policy of free trade.4 In 1825 the Levant Company’s Middle Eastern monopoly had been abolished and British merchants were then encouraged to venture into the Anatolian hinterland served by Izmir (Smyrna) as the major port; a region impenetrable. Here they the had numbers previously of British found almost merchants and their agents increased, exploiting the ready market that the British Empire: The Nineteenth Century, Andrew Porter (ed), Oxford, 1999, p. 42. 1800 – 50 world trade increased by about two and a half times, 1850 – 1910 by ten times 3 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 53, Gennadius comments on the speed of the growth of the London business colony 4 Oxford Companion to British History, John Cannon (ed.), Oxford, 1997, pp. 720 – 1, Palmerston was foreign secretary from 1830 to 1851 with two short breaks. British trade with Turkey increased eightfold during this period. He was prime minister from 1855 – 65. Cain, pp. 39 - 42 3 existed within the Ottoman Empire for cotton goods manufactured in Lancashire and encouraged by a new era of cooperation between Britain and the Porte, British financial institutions were able to take advantage of the Sultan’s abolition of state monopolies up to the Crimean War in 1854.5 Initially for Greeks became acting as Westerners dealing known their for go-betweens. This with the skill as reputation Ottomans, the intermediaries, was by no means always favourable, as the unwary foreigner had to put his or her faith in someone who could easily take advantage of the situation, and thus a connection was often made between the Greek and sharp practice. This was a persistent prejudice that was hard to shake off, and its durability is exemplified in the boy’s adventure story Yussef the Guide, published in 1887. Here the Greeks of Smyrna are described as …small, lithe, dark men, with keen faces and dark eyes, differing wonderfully from the calm, 5 Elena Frangakis-Syrett, ‘Greek mercantile activities in the Eastern Mediterranean, 1780 –1820’, Balkan Studies, 28 (1987), Thessaloniki, 73 – 86 at 73 & 82, Frangakis-Syrett argues that the infiltration of Greek merchants into the Smyrna monopoly was instrumental in the demise of the Levant Company; Charles Issawi, ‘British Trade and the Rise of Beirut, 1830 – 1860’, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 8 (Jan. 1977), 91 – 101 at 92 & 97, effect of the Sultan relinquishing monopolies and the Anglo-Turkish Commercial Convention of 1838; Sir Llewellyn Woodward, The Age of Reform 1815-1870, The Oxford History of England, Oxford, 1961, p. 236 4 dignified, if it had expression overreach, The Greek handsome Turks, but handsome in their way not been for a peculiarly sharp, shifty that suggested craftiness and a desire to if not cheat. dragoman is a disappointment to the English travellers, not meeting the standards of classical sculpture in appearance and despite, or even because of their talent for languages, untrustworthy. The Greeks have to be bargained with severely in order to pay three times above the value for their services and when the English party takes a boat, the Greek sailors live up to their reputation by trying to rob them. The Greeks, in the words of the trusty Turkish guide, Yusseff, ‘obey the laws when they feel the rod over their backs, but who, when they cannot see the rod, laugh at them’, furthermore ‘the Greek dog will bite the hand which fed him if he has a chance’.6 That even towards the end of the century the Greek dragoman could be portrayed as inherently unscrupulous in comparison with the un-businesslike but noble Turk, shows how ingrained this attitude had become.7 The Turkish lack of expertise in or indifference to mercantile endeavour had allowed the Ottoman Greek merchants 6 George Manville Fenn, Yussuf the Guide, London, 1890, Chap. V, Chap X Spencer, for an historical survey of prejudice against the Greeks, pp. 29 & 33 - 45 7 5 to achieve significant control of the Empire’s internal trade by the nineteenth century. This platform meant they were well placed to exploit the difficulties experienced by European merchants faced with the language and business customs of the Ottomans. From their success as middlemen or agents they became independent merchants and ship-owners who could look outward and play a major role in the Empire’s external trade. Outside the Ottoman Empire competition for the Mediterranean Russian and and Hapsburg Black Sea Empires to trade had introduce induced the preferential policies for immigrants, and Greeks had been enticed to set up merchant colonies in Trieste and along the northern Black Sea coast. By the time Greek entrepreneurial adventurers spread their activities as far as London a trading network already existed wherein, for example, the Greeks of Trieste were known for their links with the Ottoman ports of Smyrna, Constantinople and Alexandria and the Levant trade. After the opening of the Black Sea to Austrian and Russian traffic many Greek ships sailed under flags of convenience. Ottoman Greeks Turkish were allowed ships were to fly Greek the owned Russian and flag, manned. and During many the British occupation of the Ionian Islands (1815 – 1864) the Ionian flag was also used. In consequence the Black Sea 6 trade had come to be controlled by Greek middlemen and merchants with their main colony at Odessa.8 The network of the major Greek trading and cultural centres formed a chain from the Black Sea through the Mediterranean and into Western Europe which linking Venice, Trieste, Vienna, Genoa, Livorno and Marsailles. In the eighteenth century Paris and Amsterdam joined the list; it was only a matter of time before London would be included.9 Up until the 1820s British importation of Russian grain through the Black Sea had been small and handled by British merchants. With the relaxation of import controls and the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1848 this trade became increasingly important, so that by 1852 half the grain imported into Britain came Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 51 – 2; John Campbell and Philip Sherrard Modern Greece, London, 1968, p. 50; L. S. Stavrianos, ‘Antecedents to the Balkan Revolutions of the Nineteenth Century’, The Journal of Modern History, 29 (1957), 342, and note 17. Yannoulopoulos, pp. 25 - 6; Karides, pp. 112, 119, 123 & 127; Clogg, p. 94, the other major Black Sea ports were Taganrog and Marinol, there are estimated to have been 1000 Greek owned ships by 1815; Gelina Harlaftis, A History of Greekowned Shipping: the Making of an International Tramp Fleet, 1830 to the Present Day, London & New York, 1996, pp. 6 - 7 & 29; Vryonis, p. 51, the Chiot ship-owners enjoyed customs exemptions which gave them favoured status as merchants; Mark Levene, ‘Port Jewry of Salonika: between neo-colonialism and nation state’, David Cesarani (ed.), Port Jews: Jewish Communities in Cosmopolitan Maritime Trading Centres, 1550 – 1950, London, 2002, pp. 125 – 154, at pp. 135 – 6, Levene calls the acting of Greeks, Armenians and Jews as middlemen in the Ottoman Empire the ‘diasporic condition’. A native agent of a foreign company in Smyrna, Beirut, Alexandria and Salonika was termed a ‘comprador’, Smyrna being Greek dominated 9 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’ p. 51; Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, p. 127. The Greeks were in Amsterdam from the 1760s; Harlaftis, p. 39 8 7 from the Black Sea and Mediterranean ports, the bulk through Odessa. The establishment of the Greeks in London coincided with this boom making fortunes for the small investment of the initial traders. Other Greeks, often with family connections, soon followed until this trade was reported to be exclusively in the hands of a small group of interrelated Greek families.10 The networks that came into place enabled Greeks to move easily from one centre to another, as in the instance of Dimitrios Vikelas who was born in the port of Ermoupolis on Syra, in 1835. In 1840 his family was in Constantinople, and from there they moved to Odessa, then back to Syra, and finally, by way of Trieste, Dimitrios arrived in London at the age of seventeen.11 Due to British control of the Ionian islands some of the Greek merchants in the Levant were able to operate under the British flag. By 1834 seven out of a list of fifteen British merchants supplied by the consulate in Beirut had English names, whilst the rest included Ionians, Maltese and other British subjects. By 1848, in the wake of this growth in British interests, of the four agents 10 Kynaston, p. 169; Richard Roberts, Schroders: Merchants and Bankers, Basingstoke and London, 1992, p. 52. Between 1846 and 1853 British Russian grain imports rose from 3% to 50% 11 Panagiotes Georgoudes, O Dglütqior Bijókar, Vikelas Library, Herakleion, pp. 1 – 2, www.heraklion-city.gr/vikelas.htm 8 involved with the Syrian trade in England two were Greek based in London, Spartali and Lascaridi and N.S. Francopolo and Co.12 The Greeks who came to London set up trading companies that were of the type known in the City as an ‘International House’, a firm with more than one centre of trade. The Greeks were not the first to set up this type of business, but were part of a wave of such entrepreneurs. Initially these firms had been run by Dutch, French and Sephardic Jewish émigrés, with the Dutch in the forefront. Their hegemony was broken by merchants from Germany made up of refugees, fleeing the chaos caused by Napoleon’s armies, and Ashkenazi Jews, attracted to London because of perceived religious tolerance and the growth in the British textile trade. The Greek merchants were also drawn by the textile trade and with their networks in Amsterdam, followed the trail, to settle in London and Manchester and the north by the 1820s.13 In Peter Thorold’s words these were ‘patrician families with commerce in their blood’ and their well- Issawi, 94, from a dispatch to Palmerston, 29 July, 1834, FO 78/243. On the growth of the British commercial houses in Beirut, 94 & 98; Karides, p. 116, Ionian merchants and sailors made frequent applications for British passports in Odessa 13 S. D. Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, London, 1984, pp. 3 – 4 & 65; Peter Thorold, The London Rich: The Creation of a Great City from 1666 to the Present, Harmondsworth, 1999, pp. 298 - 9 12 9 developed mercantile ability meant that they had a different attitude to business. They were not to be bound by British conservatism concerning trade, and this freedom from constraint was an advantage allowing some of them to make considerable fortunes in the City.14 But their speedy success aroused the suspicions and confirmed the prejudices of some contemporary observers. The Greeks in the City …there was money to be made in London, and where money was to be made, men of the Greek nation will always be found. There were then, as ever, a host of small Greeks in London, anxious to profit by the various kinds of commerce which they, of all people understand well. By 1865, when M.R.L. Meason wrote the above lines,15 Greek mercantile enterprise had been an established feature of the City’s life for nearly fifty years. Meason’s statement, although it appears neutral on the surface, hints that their English competitors only grudgingly appreciated their success. It appeared that with little or no capital they had somehow come to dominate certain areas of the import-export trade, and when this energy was spent, they had then moved 14 Thorold, p. 300 10 seamlessly into finance during the ‘mania for joint-stock companies’.16 The Ionides family business interests, from their beginnings as importers and exporters to the Ottoman Empire specifically in grain and cotton goods, moved to banking, insurance, stockbroking and directorships of companies, including the Crystal Palace Company.17 To the Greeks themselves their good fortune was epitomized by the Ralli Brothers partnership and its spearhead, Pandia Ralli, who died in the same year that Meason’s words were published.18 The significance of the passing of the pioneers of the Greek colony would be that, specifically for those born in Britain, more than mere business decisions would shape the future of the Greeks in London. In the preceding chapter it was shown that the perception of the native Londoner to the Greeks was mainly of two kinds. Either the term ‘Greek’ was shorthand for a rogue or cheat and often associated with sailors, some of whom may actually have been sometimes 15 true of ethnic great Greeks, wealth. The or they latter were merchants, category had the Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, London, 1865, p. 188, and ‘Preface’, originally published anonymously in Dicken’s Household Words 16 Meason, p. 173 17 Julia Ionides, ‘Afterword’, in Luke Ionides, Memories, Ludlow, 1996, p. 69 11 greater impact on London ‘society’ and it gave to those who either moved in business or cultural circles their main conception of the Greek character. Their business methods were seen as different, certainly innovative in City terms, and were easily explained in terms of racial stereotyping. The Greek, who ‘haggles and tries to wriggle out of a deal if he feels he will lose as much as half a farthing’,19 had come to epitomize many of the negative qualities attributed to the Levantine merchant. What rankled with Meason and his audience was the climate of business in which the Greeks seemed particularly adept, whereby …at the present day, if a man has knowledge and energy of character, he does not require either capital or credit to commence trade with, and go to get on in the commercial world.20 Comments like these must be treated with caution. As James Taylor has warned, while corrupt business dealings in the City ‘led to much soul-searching and indignant hyperbole among journalists, today might reflections 18 be on clergymen termed events the do and novelists’, ‘chattering not those classes’, necessarily give whom their a full Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, 1793 – 1865, p. 46, see the Ralli family tree. As Catsiyannis has it ‘Pandias Ralli was the man who gave shape to the Greek Community’ 19 Meason, p. 163, but amongst themselves the Greeks would ‘keep their word’ 20 Meason, p. 156; for the contemporary response to ‘the morality of Mammon’ in Victorian society in the latter part of the 19 th century see James Taylor, ‘Company fraud in Victorian Britain: the Royal British 12 understanding of contemporary attitudes to commercial morality.21 The Greek links with Odessa were already in existence by the early nineteenth century, with trade routes in place whereby Levantine commodities could be sold to Russia in return for wheat.22 This meant that the Greeks who settled in London were not innocents abroad who, with inbred cunning, were able to cheat their way to success. They were well connected when they arrived and were able to exploit the connections to their considerable advantage. The fact that the agents of the merchants in ports like Odessa were related by blood or were fellow Greeks enabled the Greek merchants to buy grain on the spot, exploiting the market to get it at a better price. In Odessa, foreigners paid 5% brokerage, whereas the Greeks only paid 0.5%. The buying and selling of merchandise was the responsibility of a partner in the firm based in the foreign port.23 bank scandal of 1856’, English Historical Review, Vol. CXXII, 497 (2007), 700 – 24 21 Taylor, 701 22 Karides, pp. 120 & 122, Eastern Mediterranean goods were shipped from Alexandria, Thessaloniki, Izmir, Istanbul and the Aegean archipelago with increasing European demand for wheat meaning that after 1815 grain accounted for over ninety percent of Russian exports that passed through Odessa 23 Karides, p. 128 13 In Meason’s book, The Bubbles of Finance, Mr. Velardi, a fictitious ‘Greek gentleman’ and merchant, was aiming to set up …simultaneously, mercantile offices in London, Smyrna, and Odessa, as correspondents of the same firm. In each of the latter towns…he had already a partner…’ In order to give him credibility, though, Mr. Velardi needs an English partner in London.24 Through their exploitation of the network of fellow Greeks it was perceived that such a merchant was able to start up with little capital using a method whereby he could draw his bills on foreign houses ‘endorsed by one of his wealthy and better-known countrymen’.25 Meason’s Mr. Velardi was not among the first wave of Greek merchants coming to London, but reliant on those who had already paved the way. As Charles Capper noted in 1862 one of the advantages the Greek merchants of London and Manchester had over their rivals when trading with the Levant was 'their knowledge of the languages, customs, habits and requirements of the various Eastern populations with whom they have to trade'.26 It was this facility they used to the full, but to his 24 Meason, p. 157 Meason, p. 159; Magriotis, p. 351, larger Greek companies acted as credit for smaller ones 26 Charles Capper, The Port and Trade of London, London, 1862, p. 289 25 14 surprise the trade between Great Britain and Greece was as not as extensive as would have been imagined given ‘the number and wealth of the Greek merchants settled in London and Manchester’. Instead … the trade of the Greek merchants is all with the Levant; and the trade of England with Greece Proper is very limited, and is by no means increasing in amount.27 Greece at this time was still a small and poor country and as Capper failed to point out, few, if any, of the merchants would have originated from within the borders of ‘Greece Proper’ as it was then. It was the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire whose knowledge and manipulation of local conditions meant they did not rely, unlike the foreigners, on middlemen. They could therefore act more profitably, making themselves the ‘carriers, factors and traders of the Levant’ by dealing directly in the buying and selling of commodities. They were also not afraid to deal in any size or class of goods and through their operations in banking exchange they were able to penetrate commercial activities that had until then the prerogative of other merchants in the Levant. In Capper’s view the feeling of unfairness in this situation as regards the British merchant was only redeemed with the establishment of the Ottoman Bank and the 15 Bank of Egypt, both based in London. Then the British traders could operate on an equal footing and were able to gain access to areas monopolized by the Greeks.28 Part of the Greek’s success, as Capper pointed out, was also due to their preparedness to diversify. They were involved in the import of silk, opium and fruit from Turkey and Greece and exporters. cotton Greek from firms in Egypt,29 but Manchester they were purchased also for the London houses ‘large quantities of Manchester goods’, which they shipped on their ‘own account to the Levant’ or acting ‘as agents for firms abroad’. Again according to Meason they outdid the native English competition by being able to ‘purchase cheaper than the English firms’. This he asserts was by not insisting on trading in cash but carrying ‘on amongst themselves a system of credit easier to operate on small capital goods were than sent English firms’. ‘throughout the Once ports purchased of the these Levant’ enabling ‘the Greek importers of English goods [to] make 27 Capper, p. 286 Capper, pp. 289 & 291; David Kynaston, The City of London: Vol. I, A World of its Own 1815-1890, London, 1994, p. 225; Cain, and Hopkins, British Imperialism, p. 401; Ioanna Pepelasis Minoglo, "Ethnic minority groups in international banking: Greek diaspora bankers of Constantinople and Ottoman state finances, c. 1840-81", Financial History Review, (9 October 2002) 125-146 at 128, the Ottoman Bank was set up in 1856 29 Kynaston, p. 169 28 16 large fortunes where the local English merchants can barely make a living.’30 The rivalry for the Syrian trade was indeed so keen that the firm of Spartali and Lascaridi gave their correspondents goods could be special sold facilities nearly as cheap so that in Syria British as in England.31 Over the years of Victoria’s reign the Greek merchant families and their colony would move from being looked on askance as being dubious foreigners, to becoming members of the establishment.32 In the middle years of the nineteenth century the Greeks had not reached such a level of respect or assimilation, but had certainly moved from being émigrés on the make to being people of some substance. It is during this period that they began to acquire the trappings of wealth and to broaden their social circle. By the time John S. Schillizzi died in 1908 he was among the 35 richest businessmen of his generation, leaving over two million pounds and Sir Lucas Ralli, who despite dieing in the middle 30 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 164 - 5 Issawi, 97 32 W. J. Stillman, The Autobiography of a Journalist, vol. 2, London, 1901, pp. 3 & 148. Stillman, a philhellene and the husband of Marie Spartalli, was happy at the end of his life to describe the Pasha in Crete, a Greek, as having a native ‘Greek duplicity’ and even his friend Charilaos Tricoupis, whom he admired as a politician, he believed could be ‘as slippery and dishonest as any of his countrymen’ because for a Greek ‘evasion, diplomatic duplicity, and the usual devices of the weak 31 17 of the depression in 1931, was able to leave a similar amount.33 In the current climate of concern over immigration to the UK, national groups have become associated with occupations or characteristics that have then been extended to racial stereotypes: hardworking, skilled or unskilled, reliable or untrustworthy. Their presence has been seen as undermining the status and prospects of the native population seeking employment and bringing about a change in the national moral outlook. One of the characteristics, or depending on the point of view, charges held against the Greeks was their close-knit community or clannishness. This was one of the ways Meason was able to attack them, but according to Chapman, they were not unique in this. Hugenots, Jews Scots, Quakers and Lutherans involved in merchant banking also exhibited the same characteristic. Any group of ethnic or religious outsiders clung together. In the world of business one way of protecting was through family loyalty. The brought to terms by the strong, are ingrained with the race’. Such attitudes would linger well beyond the Victorian era 33 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 118; Ionides, Ion, p. 4 – 5; Alexander C. Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 4 – 5; Dakers, p. 7. Pandia Ralli and family moved from Finsbury Circus to 5 Connaught Place W2 in 1851 and Alexander Ionides to an elite and artistic circle in Tulse Hill in 1833, where he made his first artistic commission by George Frederick Watts in 1837, by 1864 he was in Holland Park; Thorold, p. 300 18 Quakers were particularly held to deal only with their own but by 1867. Even so the Bensons were on good terms with the Rallis and, despite the prejudice that Meason reflects, Greek firms were being invited to cooperate in financial institutions inspired by the Credit Mobilier.34 In taking to task the sharp practices, as he saw them, of ‘the city of London, our own dear overgrown Babylon’ where ‘the most successful frauds have been the handiwork of foreigners’, Meason expressed the view that contemporary lax commercial morality was a foreign import. He was careful though to state in his preface that the characters in his book were not based on single individuals but were in the way of a cartoon caricature, an aggregate of types.35 Mr. Velardi was a fair average specimen of the Greek merchant as found all over the world. He was about thirty years of age, wore a short-cut and very black beard, dressed well, was gentlemanly in his manners – courteous, in fact, to a degree, except when he was getting the worst of a bargain, when he would rave and rant like the lowest Houndsditch Jew. Besides his own language, he spoke English, French, and Italian well; a little Russian too, and some knowledge of Turkish. He had served as a clerk in a merchant’s office in Syra, and also in Odessa. He had been in business on his own account for five years, during which he had suspended payment twice, but had always managed to compound with his 34 Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, pp. 65 – 6; Kynaston, p. 314 on Rothschild family loyalty 35 Meason, pp. 87 & 149 and ‘Preface’ 19 creditors pound.’36 for two or three shillings in the This portrait reveals some accurate knowledge of his subject born out by the history of Greek business but the general tone is one of condescending respect for the talents attributed to the Greeks mixed with an air of disapproval. The linking of Mr. Velardi with a Jew was more than a cheap insult. The Greek and the Jew were the embodiment of the new type of city entrepreneur, …one of those clever cosmopolitan adventurers in the financial world…who…find their way to London as surely as sparks of fire fly upwards. A German by birth, a Jew by race, a nominal Christian by creed, a Frenchman by education, an Englishman by naturalization, a universal linguist by intuition, and a financial agent by profession…’37 36 Meason, pp. 158 – 9 M.R.L. Meason, The Profits of Panics: showing how financial storms arise, who make money by them, and other revelations of a city man, London, 1866, p. 18; John A. Petropulos, ‘Introduction’, Hellenism and the first Greek War of Liberation, 19 – 41 at 20 – 21, a sense of statelessness was something the Ottoman and diaspora Greeks felt in common with the Jews. For a discussion on cosmopolitanism and the Greek diaspora see Evridiki Sifneos, ‘”Cosmopolitanism” as a feature of the Greek commercial diaspora’, History and Anthropology, 16 (March 2005), 97-111 and Henk Driessen, ‘Mediterranean port cities: cosmopolitanism reconsidered’, History and Anthropology, 16 (March 2005), 129 – 141. Sifneos argues that ‘cosmopolitanism’ was a particular characteristic of the Greek commercial diaspora with particular refernce to Odessa and Alexandria. Driesseen feels the case for a ‘cosmopolitan’ worldview in such cities as Izmir and Alexandria, where the citizens felt more in common with their fellows in other ports, has been overstated. Maria Vassilikou, ‘Greeks and Jews in Salonika ad Odessa: inter-ethnic relations in cosmopolitan port cities’, David Cesarani (ed.), Port Jews: Jewish Communities in Cosmopolitan Maritime Trading Centres, 1550 – 1950, London, 2002, pp. 155 – 172 at pp. 155 – 6, Greeks and Jews shared common characteristics and comparable development as members of trade diasporas trading in the same geographical context and cosmopolitan atmosphere 37 20 The cleverness of the foreigner, though acknowledged, is not really appreciated and is seen as putting the native merchant at a disadvantage. The chameleon character of the foreigner only highlights his flighty and untrustworthy nature reeking of insincerity and adventurism. This climate of opinion colours Trollope’s dissection of speculative finance in his 1873 novel The Way We Live Now, in which the dubious characters are of foreign extraction and the archfinancier Melmotte is ‘a man without a country’.38 In Meason’s view this system of credit was at best dubious and at worst illegal. By exploiting their international links, in Smyrna, Leghorn (Livorno) or Hamburg, where the ‘correspondents were always Greek firms’, the Greeks were able to draw on funds from abroad, keeping the plates spinning until such time as which they could pay the bills. The credit was sold on to the correspondent who had ‘orders, so soon as he received the bill, to sell it as if it were his own property, and remit…the proceeds, charging his commission of five per cent.’ The transactions always appeared legitimate – Messrs. Velardi and Co. of Smyrna drew on Messrs. Cavcali and Co. of Hamburg for the sum of one 38 Anthony Trollope, The Way We Live Now, Oxford, 1982, p. 30 and see ‘Introduction’ by John Southerland, pp. xiv & xviii 21 thousand pounds payable in three months, Messrs. Cavali and Co. after sending the first bills of exchange forward for acceptance endorsed it and sold it on the Hamburg exchange. Anyone not in on the secret thought Velardi & Co. owed Cavali & Co. and had remitted this draft in payment of debt but the bill was an accommodation bill on a large scale, the profits of the sale going to the London branch to pay off bills which either the Smyrna or Odessa house had drawn upon the London firm.39 That the Greek firms were able to exploit their international links was true. These links had been set up over a period of time and were based on family networks. In this way trust could be relied on where English merchants, who still had some …old-fashioned notions about not drawing or accepting bills, unless the said bills really represent some veritable commercial transaction, between drawer and drawee were at the mercy of foreign agents. Meason suggests that a bona fide capital of three hundred pounds could be turned into credit of thirty or forty thousand pounds by a ‘paper traffic’ through the Exchanges of Europe.40 The development from dealing in credit, to banking would have been a natural one and the diaspora Greeks in Constantinople were the first to set up banks there in the 1840s. 39 40 There was a culture of speculation Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 160 - 2 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 162 within the 22 Merchant Houses that, already operating a system of internal banking, would gamble on futures. These financiers had links with Marseilles and London, particularly George Zarifis, personal banker Mavrocordatos, to the Vlastos, Sultan, Coronios, and the Schilizzis and Rallis, Andreas Syngros who moved to London in 1870. As Meason rightly says, they operated on three months credit raising finance for the Ottomans in the West and relocating the deferred payments abroad as security where they could draw on a branch of theirs or an affiliated firm or bank in Marseilles or London, to raise further capital. According to Meason it was not until the Greeks started the trade in bills with no backing on terms of ‘money or capital’ that it was felt that large profits could be made in this way. The reason it worked for the Greeks was that …to do them justice, the Greeks are the only people in the world that could carry on that extraordinary trade, because they form the only nation the natives of which have implicit confidence in one another. Whatever a Greek is to a foreigner, he is always true to his countrymen. Eventually by 1860 their floating debt had inundated the Western markets with Ottoman ‘paper’ reaching four million 23 pounds in London, more than the Sultan could pay leading to a crisis.41 Cotton textiles were crucial to international trade in the early and mid-nineteenth century and the America Civil War benefited the Greeks because American cotton did not reach Europe, Egypt, or India.42 At their peak there were 50 Greek commercial houses in London, importing wheat, linen and wool and exporting cotton cloth, coal, sugar and other products of the Empire.43 Most of these enterprises were listed in the 1850s as ‘small’ or ‘very small’. Manchester was the centre of the cotton industry where German, Dutch, Swiss, French and Italian merchants were already established by 1835. The Greeks followed the trail to the northwest where they were joined by the Spanish, Portuguese and the Russians.44 Daunton argues that, contrary to the view that the city represented a self-contained entity, connections between the city and industry were close, at least early in 41 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 162 - 3; Ioanna Pepelasis Minoglou, "Ethnic minority groups in international banking: Greek diaspora bankers of Constantinople and Ottoman state finances, c. 184081", Financial History Review, (9 October 2002) 125-146 at 126 – 8, 130, 142, Syngros ran a brokerage house, Syngros, Koronios [Coronio] and partners 42 M. J. Daunton, ‘”Gentlemanly Capitalism” and British Industry 1820 – 1914’, Past and Present, No. 122 (Feb. 1989), 119 – 158, at 139; Mangriotis, p. 351 43 Mangriotis, p. 350 44 S. D. Chapman, The Cotton Industry in the Industrial Revolution, London and Basingstoke, 1972, p. 49 24 the century. The ties between merchants and industry were ‘one and the same’. The Greek merchant houses were part of a circular chain linking trade that took textiles from Lancashire to the Middle East and brought in grain from the Black Sea to London. In this way they developed a close connection with calico-printers for the first and with the Baltic Exchange for the second.45 The Greek London colony carried out its business in the environs of the Baltic Exchange.46 Their families were such a feature that when the exchange produced its first printed list of members there were eleven Ralli, six Mavrogordato and six Schilizzi.47 A vibrant picture of the Greek merchants at work in the mid-century is given by Walter Thornbury. The London terms of the factors are one months open credit, and the buyer has to lodge any objection as to the quality, bulk &c. at the factors stand before eleven o’clock on the following market day, or else abide by his bargain. The centre of the market is devoted, at the entrance end, to shipbrokers of all classes, and also to masters of small craft, and lightermen; and in the middle assemble the great Greek merchants, who almost monopolise the importation of corn from every part of the world: they give directions to factors who are selling their arrived cargoes, and to agents who are negotiating with country merchants and factors from 45 Daunton, p. 139 Mangriotis, p. 350 47 Kynaston, p. 292 46 25 all parts of the kingdom, either personally or by telegraph, for the sale of cargoes shipping at foreign ports, or on passage, or arrived at Plymouth or Queenstown.48 He continues, ‘The upper part of the market is the place of oil-seed crushers, and here the Greeks again are the great importers of all kinds of oil-seeds’. Meason’s Mr. Velardi always spent ‘…two or three hours…at “the Baltic”, which is the stock exchange of all the Levant trade in London’, where he saw friends and transacted business.49 The Families According to Gennadius the Ionides family from Constantinople were the first of the new breed of Greek merchants to set up business in London. In 1815 Constantine Ipliktsis came to London with John Ralli, and founded Argenti, Thomas & Co. with offices in 14 Tokenhouse Yard, near the Bank of England. His father ‘Joannes’ had apparently already been importing ‘Manchester goods’ into Constantinople but paid for his success by being murdered by the Turks and nailed to his front door. Constantine’s great- Walter Thornbury, Old and New London: a narrative of its history, its people, and its places. Vol. 2, London, Paris & New York, 1872 – 8, p. 182. Mangriotis mentions Falmouth or Cork as the destination of the goods. Mangriotis, p. 350 49 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 166 48 26 grandson, Alexander Ionides claims that John Ralli, his ‘youthful assistant’, was responsible for founding Ralli Brothers.50 This is contradicted by Gennadius who informs us that Ralli is a fairly common name in the Greek world, including Constantinople,51 and there is some resulting confusion in the story. In the Gennadius account the Rallis operated independently. In 1818, John the eldest of five brothers from Chios came to London with his youngest brother Eustratius from Livorno where their father Stephanos Ralli, already a wealthy Chiot merchant, had trading activities. At some point it was decided to open a London branch and by 1820 Eustratio Ralli & Co were recorded as being in Billiter Square and Ralli & Petrocochino in Bond Street. Ralli & Petrocochino were also recorded as being at 5 Union Court, 50 Ionides, Ion, p. 1; Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 52. According to Gennadius, Constantine was smuggled to his friends in London by his mother, which implies there already were links established in London at that time. Catsiyannis has the story that Constantine Ipliktis, in order to cut out the middle-men sent as his own representatives Nicholas Thomas and Theodore, son of Strati Ralli, an uncle of the Ralli brothers, to London to buy textiles from the mills. He doubts though that Constantine came to London as early as 1815, but after the collapse of his business in the 1822 troubles. Catsiyanis takes his information from the biographer Anastasios Goudas, Bioi Paralleloi ton Andron tes Epanastaseos (Parallel Lives of the Men of the Revolution) Athens, 1875. Catsiyannis, Constantine Ionidis-Ipliktzis, pp. 5 – 6 & 110. The confusion is added to by a tradition that the Ionides family went to Manchester first, David B. Elliott, A Pre-Raphaelite Marriage: The Lives and Works of Marie Spartali Stillman and William James Stillman, Woodbridge, 2006, p. 10; Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society, New Haven and London, 1999, p. 8; Julia Atkins, ‘Morris and Aglaia Coronio’, William Morris Society Newsletter April 1990, www.morrissociety.org/newsltrs/newsltr-april90.html 51 Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, p. 21 note 23; Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 10, it may be John Ralli was distantly related as it 27 Old Broad Street, between 1820 and 1825.52 Alexander Ionides, maintaining the pioneering spirit of his father Constantine, was credited as the first Greek to set up a branch in Manchester, and his family were regarded as leading lights, honoured amongst their fellows for their ‘patriotic traditions’,53 but it was the Rallis who went on to eclipse all others to become the largest and most successful of the Greek businesses. There is also contradictory evidence as to when Pandias Ralli, the third son arrived in London to take over the business but it was some time between 1820 and 1827. According to the official Ralli company history it was in 1826 shortly before John left for Odessa. By 1825 due to the rapid expansion of the business, now styled Ralli Brothers, the centre of operations was moved to 25 Finsbury Circus, where the remained family until lived its behind collapse the in office 1961.54 and where Meanwhile it the brothers, acting in partnership, each established a branch was claimed the Ralli family had branches in Constantinople and Athens and elsewhere 52 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 53; Frangakis-Syrett, ‘Greek mercantile activities in the Eastern Mediterranean’, p. 82 53 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 52 54 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 53; Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 4 – 8. In ‘The Directory’ of 1826’ the firm was entered as Ralli Brothers, 25 Finsbury Circus, Bowater Organisation, History and Activities of the Ralli Trading Group, p. 2 28 of the family firm in a major strategic commercial centre forming a network from the Black Sea to England. John was in Odessa to organize the grain exports, Thomas in Constantinople, and Augustus in Marsailles. Once, according to Gennadius, Pandia had brought the London branch to ‘a sate of prosperity and prominence’ Eustratius was dispatched to Liverpool. This cannot have taken long because he was heading the Manchester branch that was opened in 1827. He eventually died in London where he was ‘honoured as the doyen of the community, after the demise of his brother Pantia’.55 This close network may be on of the reasons for the Ralli’s success. Whereas all the Greek firms used family connections to further their aims none matched the dedication of maintaining a significant filial presence in each major trading centre. As Karidis has pointed out, through their family connections the Greeks of Odessa had ‘excellent access to commercial information’ from across Europe; better none could have been placed than the Rallis.56 55 Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, p. 53, Gennadius goes as far as to say that the grain trade of south Russia was organized and controlled by Ralli Bros.; Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, pp. 21 - 2 and note 24, Ionides, Ion, pp. 1 - 2; Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 4; Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, pp. 20 – 1; Bowater Organisation, History and Activities of the Ralli Trading Group, p. 1 56 Karidis, p.127 29 The Ralli brothers were followed by their cousins Antonios Alexander and Antonios Theodore Ralli, also from Chios, who set up as Antonio Ralli & Co, which was eventually absorbed by Ralli Bros. Antonios Alexander, whose father had been one of the hostages murdered by the Turks on Chios in the 1822 massacre, became deputy to Pandia Ralli both in business and community affairs.57 When the Illustrated London News published his will in 1882, they described Antonio Alexander Ralli as a ‘foreign banker, late of No. 102, Westbourne-terrace, Hyde Park, and of No. 9, Gracechurch-street’, who left a personal estate of upwards of £437,000. He left his son Alexander his freehold residence, No. 10, Heene-terrace, Worthing, and his house and grounds in his native island of Scio; to his son Pandia, his freehold house, No. 2, Heene-terrace; to his son Paul, his freehold house, No. 3, Heene-terrace; to his son George, a freehold garden and some land at Worthing; to his daughter Mrs. Polymnia Peter Scaramanga, £50,000; upon trust for his daughter Antonina, £50,000; to his daughters Mrs. Fanny Theodore Schilizzi and Mrs. Virginia Demetrius Spartali, £20,000 each; to his son-in-law Mr. Schilizzi, £5000; to his son-in-law Mr. Scaramanga,58 This will shows, apart from the wealth accumulated by not the most successful of the Rallis, the family ties and connections maintained over the years and Antonio’s status as a foreigner with links still to his home. The links with the Scaramangas and the Schilizzis show that intermarriage 57 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, pp. 24 – 6 & 73. Antonio Alexander Ralli (1812 1882) 30 between the Rallis and these families had been maintained since the early eighteenth century. Another oft-recurring family name in Ralli marriages is that of Mavrocordato.59 The success Loukis of Tzifos the fled Rallis from encouraged Smyrna to others London to follow. following the Turkish reprisals of 1821. Turkish brutality was not his only motivation. His family already ran a prosperous merchant enterprise within the sphere of Smyrna, Chios and Syra and a desire to deal first hand with their ‘correspondents in Europe’ and spurred on by the success of …two or three of our fellow islanders – the Columbuses of Greek commerce – [who] about that time had pitched their tents in London…it was decided that …I should go to London accompanied by a maternal uncle of mine’ Being short of capital Tzifos was able to send a cargo from Mykonos to Tinos on board a British vessel using a bill of lading from a friend in Smyrna, who, being an Ionian, was a British subject. With this small gain he was able to enter the Russian grain trade based in Syra, where he went into partnership with his brother-in-law, one selling in Tinos the other buying in Syra.60 With this start, despite having 58 The Illustrated London News, ‘Antonio Alexander Ralli’, August 12, 1882, p.184 59 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 11, family tree, other recurring names are: Argenti and Ralli itself 60 Vikelas, Loukis Laras, pp. 10 – 11, 61, 72, 89, 91 & 96 31 lost everything in Smyrna, he was able eventually to make the move to London where he became a ‘respected and wellliked wheat merchant…working in the City’.61 The author of Tzifos’ ‘reminiscences’, the aforementioned, Dimitrios Vikelas came to London to work as an accountant in his uncle Vasilios Melas’ firm involved in importing wheat from Russia and the Danube, where they were joined by Vasilios’ brother Leon.62 Following their early success the next logical step for Ralli Bothers was to open an office in India, which they did in 1851 opening a branch in Calcutta, followed in 1861 by one in Bombay and a network of offices all over India. Although Lancashire textiles found their way into the Ottoman Empire, with devastating effect for local producers, the real expanding market was India.63 Schillizzi & Co. followed the Ralli lead in diversification and moving their 61 Vikelas, ‘Preface’ by Helen Vlachos pp. 5 - 6 Georgoudes, pp. 1 - 2 63 Bowater Organisation, History and Activities of the Ralli Trading Group, p. 2; Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 48; Kynaston, p. 169; Bernard Porter, The Lion’s Share: A Short History of British Imperialism 1850 – 1995, Harlow, 1995, pp. 4 & 7. Cotton goods accounted for 63.8% of exports in 1859 – 61; P.J. Cain, ‘Economics and Empire: The Metropolitan Context’, The Oxford History of the British Empire: The Nineteenth Century, Andrew Porter (ed), OUP, 1999, in 1854 – 7 exports to India represented 31.7% whilst imports were 37.7%, both figures increasing towards the end of the century, Table 2.2 and 2.4, pp. 35 & 44 62 32 focus from the Mediterranean and the Black Sea to new markets such as India.64 The Greeks were in the forefront of taking advantage of new business methods. To some traditionalists in the City contracts made by the Greek houses taking advantage of the introduction of the telegraph, steamships and the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, were perhaps thought ‘illegitimate’. The Rallis and Schilizzis were quick to embrace changes that enabled them to offer competitive prices in Jute in London as opposed to Calcutta. The Greek method of dealing whilst the produce was ‘afloat’ and in futures rather than correspondents and commissions was seen as the coming trend.65 These trends also had the effect of weakening family and ethnic ties. In 1865 the Ralli partnership was dissolved but Stephen Ralli the son Eustratius Brothers of Ralli with Augustus Ralli re-established themselves as and the John, company partners. A the name, son of Ralli succession of partners followed. Stephen Ralli with Alexander Vlasto, Sir Lucas Ralli with Alexander Vlasto and finally Sir Strati Ralli.66 The Ralli’s success could be put down to their single-minded application to business. From the 1820s onward 64 65 Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, London, p. 60 Kynaston, p. 306 33 there were two elements to the Greek colony.67 As Alexander Ioinides Jnr. put it: …the Greeks of the London community were of two sorts. Those from Chios – the great majority - & those from elsewhere – a very small minority, consisting in two families. The nature of those from Chios bid them occupy themselves in commerce to the exclusion of anything else. Those from elsewhere – including the Ionides – at times had other interests. Alexander words betray a rather superior tone which looks down on the Ralli’s lack of cultural pursuits for their own ends. The Ionides whilst certainly successful saw their fortunes fluctuate and not all the members of the family were as gifted or determined in business.68 Gennadius credits Pandia Ralli as the first to organize the system of trading in cargoes of grain, while still on their way from the Black Sea: a system which for more than two generations was recognized as rule and custom of the corn trade in England.69 The bill of lading and a sample of the goods, grain from Odessa for instance, was sent by post to the London partner as soon as the cargo was loaded and in effect sold whilst the cargo was still at sea in ‘what was then the most 66 Bowater Organisation, History and Activities of the Ralli Trading Group, p. 2 67 See Chapter One pp. 13 & 16 on clans 68 Ionides, Ion, p. 47 69 Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, p. 22, note 25; Kynaston, p. 169 - 70 34 profitable corn market’. The money made could then be laid out on the return cargo of cotton manufactures, cotton goods being in great demand in the Levant, or yarn or coal. In order for the method to work strict controls were necessary, but these were possible through the keeping the network a family affair.70 However Gennadius puts the success of the firm down to Pandia’s ‘absolute probity and straightforwardness in his transactions’. Although profit is the motive of every merchant only ‘reasonable gain, fairly acquired’ should be the goal. Pandia rule of the company was based on ‘iron discipline’ within a ‘patriarchal tradition’. This engendered according to Gennadius, a filial devotion and submissiveness on behalf of the younger members of the firm. This apparently did not hinder merit or hard work attaining its rewards. The richer members of the Jewish community had favoured Finsbury Circus and Finsbury Square, which had been developed in the 1790s, as a place to live. In the 1830s they started to move on, around the time the Greeks arrived. Some moved north others took a western route through Marylebone, Paddington, Hyde Park to the West End Synagogue 70 Kynaston, p. 169; Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, p. 127 35 in St. Petersburgh Place in Bayswater. The Greeks would follow a similar line around thirty years later establishing the Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Moscow Road close by.71 The activities of Ralli Brothers were not unique but parallelled those of other foreign companies, but most specifically the Jewish merchants like Schroders. These also had their family networks and branches in Odessa, capitalizing in the expansion of trade in grain from southern Russia, and other European centres, such as Paris, Trieste, Amsterdam and Antwerp. As Ralli Brothers activities in the cotton trade required them to set up an office in Manchester in 1826, so too Schroders had their Lancashire office in Liverpool. As members of the Ralli family were major figures in the Baltic Exchange, so too was John Henry Schroder a member of the Baltic Committee until the 1870s.72 The Greeks certainly had trading friendships with the Jews, but business was still business, at least outside the Greek circle, and Mattos Mocatta of Mocatta & Goldsmith, who counted the Rallis as friends, was evidently put out when they went to a rival for bullion.73 The Greeks were part of a move away from the old connections between the merchant 71 72 Thorold, p. 332 Roberts, pp. 52 - 3. 36 bankers and the aristocracy. This new blood, such as the Rallis and the Spanish house of Murietta and various AngloGerman firms had no aristocratic connections, brought more vitality and competitiveness to the City and were quicker to seize opportunities. deficiencies of entrepreneurship Chapman the was has gentlemen offset by argued amateurs the that in influx of the British foreign entrepreneurs, especially Germans, Greeks and Americans to the City. These groups were more single-mindedly devoted to hard work because they came from outside the public school leisured elite class. They paid little attention to politics and socializing. Their loyalties lay outside the City, in the case of the Greeks to their own family networks. As Daunton points out being an outsider was true only in the early years. Within a generation the Greeks would send their children to Public School, marry into English families and become integrated into the system; they would at least attempt to become ‘gentlemen’.74 The dominance of the Anglo-Russian grain trade by Greek families such as the Rallis, Rodocanachis, Scaramangas and Negropontis, 73 with Kynaston, p. 293 their bases in London, only lasted a 37 generation. Unlike their Jewish counterparts they were unable to meet the need to invest in Russia in warehouses, ships and docks, despite available capital, the Rallis had £4.2 million in the Far Eastern trade. By the second half of the century Jewish merchants had taken this lead. The Greeks had lost their distinctive advantage due to the rise of Jewish middlemen in the Russian grain trade who naturally preferred to deal with fellow Jews. The Rodocanachis were the only Greek firm who were able to make an investment into Russia. Through their base in St. Petersburg they set up cotton spinning and weaving factories, a flourmill, brewery, pottery, wire factory and steamship company.75 Meason is not only concerned with the misuse facilities. The attitudes of the foreign of credit Levantine commission agent can invade the world of banking. With a reputation for clever business dealing it is but a short step before the agent is invited on to the board of a bank and where Greek commercial men generally follow and often help each other, no sooner was the name of one of their community seen on the board of a joint-stock bank, than a perfect flood of current accounts poured into the concern…76 74 S.D. Chapman, ‘British-based investment groups’, Economic Review, Vol. 38, No. 2 (1985), 230 – 251 at 231; Daunton, p.143 75 Chapman, ‘British-based investment groups’, pp. 241 & 248 76 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 177 History 38 Once established he can then abuse his position as director by re-discounting the bills of small businesses through the bank, making extra money not at his own risk.77 He was seen as an asset because, through his trade connections He introduced to the bank a host of friends, all so called “”mercantile’ men, who opened accounts with us, and “did” largely in the discount way. These gentlemen were chiefly foreigners, mostly descendents of the ancient Hellenic race. The bills they brought us were pretty uniform in character. The house of Bravetti and Co. of Odessa, would draw for seven and four hundred pounds ten shillings and eight pence, at three months after date, upon Bravetti Brothers, of London, in favour of Ramonda and Company, also of London. Of course the bill would be duly accepted, and would then be brought to us for discount. If matters went right – if no storm arose – the bill would duly be provided for, at maturity, by the London house drawing upon the Odessa firm, and getting their draft discounted. Had matters been sifted, it would probably have been found that Bravetti and Co., and Bravetti Brothers, were one and the same people, and if one house failed the other was pretty certain to follow suit.78 It can be seen that the proliferation of houses with their interconnected network of directors and family members could be taken as a way of keeping their dealings obscure and away from scrutiny. The charge against the Greek house of never allowing ‘many people to see below the surface in their 77 78 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 69 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 75 39 affair, and that is one reason why they succeed…’79 no doubt added to the feeling that the Greeks kept everything within the family both metaphorically and literally. Greek companies often seemed to find it necessary to operate under a proliferation of names, so that as well as the original firm in London of Cassavetti, Cavafy and CoCavafy, which then split to form Cavafy Brothers, the cotton business was in the hands of P. J. Cavafy and Co. who had offices in Alexandria and London’s Threadneedle Street, and Cavafy and Co. who operated elsewhere and in Liverpool and Cairo. Meason’s Mr. Velardi also has a number of companies, Velardi and Williamson in London, Velardi and Co. in Smyrna and Velardi Brothers in Odessa, but they are all a sham as Mr. Velardi is the only true partner. A circular traffic of trading in ‘paper’ could then be set up through the exchanges of Europe of whose dealing of course the whiley foreigner has superior knowledge, being able to buy and sell through his ‘correspondents in every part of the known world’.80 The successes of the early years where not easy to maintain and by the middle of the century the vicissitudes of the 79 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 166 40 business world began to have their effect even on the most prosperous of the Greek families. According to his grandson the Crimean War was to blame for the beginnings of Alexander Ionides financial problems. Luke Ionides, Alexander’s son, when he returned to London in 1857 from Heidelberg University found that his father ‘had lost nearly all his fortune through the Indian Mutiny which affected the value of stocks which had to be realized to pay for merchandise’. Whichever was the main cause, the uncertainties of the 1850s had their effect on business and the Bank of London of which Alexander was a director failed, as did the London Discount Co. leaving him losses of £120,000 in unlimited liabilities in one year. In consequence Luke, who had been ‘destined for the diplomatic service’ was put to work in his father’s office. Alexander’s failure was a contributory factor in his selling of his Tulse Hill home to raise funds and his move to his new house in 1864 at 1 Holland Park which he bought with his insulate wife’s the diamonds.81 community from Greek solidarity financial could difficulties. not As Meason claimed, ‘If the system fails half a dozen firms can 80 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 58 & 59; Robert Liddell, Cafavy: a critical biography, London, 2000, pp. 18 & 22. 81 Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 14; Luke Ionides, Memories, p. 29; David B. Elliott, A Pre-Raphaelite Marriage: The Lives and Works of Marie Spartali Stillman and William James Stillman, Suffolk, 2006, p. 16; Caroline Dakers, The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society, New Haven and London, 1999, p. 109 41 fall and the larger firm be weakened’ so in the 1860s the Greeks were ousted from the Odessa grain trade by German Jewish competition following the closure of numerous small Greek houses in the Constantinople chain of bankruptcies. Following the Bank of London failure in 1866, the leading Anglo-Greek shipping line floundered in the financial crisis of 1867 precipitated by the overreaching speculations of Overend suspend Gurney & payments Co. Franghiadi for a & period Rodocarnachi in 1869 had and to then Rodocarnachis’ Imperial Bank, whose scramble for accounts was accused of being eager and disreputable, was sold to the Midland. The move into unwise speculation brought down Cavafy Brothers in 1876, when George Cavafy, manager of the family firm was ‘led astray by the temptations of London life’. Michael Spartali was declared bankrupt in 1885. The Rallis’ partners and successors in the Russian trade, the Scaramagas became insolvent in 1888. The Rallis survived and prospered by concentrating on India.82 82 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, p. 187; S.D. Chapman, Merchant Enterprise in Britain: from the Industrial Revolution to World War I, 1992, p. 161; Kynaston, pp. 231 & 237 – 40; Liddell, Cafavy, p. 26. The real fault, according to Constantine Cavafy, lay with younger brother Peter John who speculated naively in ‘United Bonds and Sugar’ although according to Liddle his other brothers Aristides and Paul were not above some dubious activities. Elliott, p. 15; The Law Times, May 16 1885, p. 53, certificate of bankruptcy at the High Court of Justice for Michael Spartali ‘Old Broad-Bt, merchant’ who became insolvent by ‘misfortune and without any misconduct’ 42 Michael Spartali’s ‘financial embarrassments’ were to the sum of £600,000 and involved debts to individuals who were more than mere acquaintances. The crash involved Michael’s two sons, but not the wife of Demetrius who had her own money. Their house in Rylstone was protected because it was in Mrs. Spartali’s name. The crisis was overcome with the aid of friends, particularly the Rallis, who together advanced £30,000 with which to pay off his creditors at an agreed rate. The house in Marseilles house was also safe, but they had to sell their house in Clapham and move to Kensington. Michael’s failure was officially put down to unwise investment in the Alexandrian grain market. Unofficially, although clouded in obscurity, the very reason for having family members involved in the business proved not infallible. Mrs. Spartali’s brother who was dispatched to Alexandria £60,000 Michael and to chase promptly Spartali’s up a vanished. lack of debt A of £100,000 contributory funds was a pocketed factor to political disagreement that kept back sums owed to Spartali and Co. by the Greek government for services rendered in the 1870s for the pursuit of Greek liberation. The involvement Gennadius, as Greek charge d’affairs in London at the time, in the 43 affair shows that he cannot be relied on as an impartial observer.83 Whereas Alexander Ionides failures were not permanent and he continued to necessarily prosper, continue the with mercantile the same gene force into did not the next generation of the family. The dynamic enterprising singlemindedness and solidarity of the founding fathers became dissipated by the time of their grandchildren’s maturity. Luke Ionides, who married out of the Greek and business circle, was not gifted in commerce but more suited to the life of a bon Ostensibly in supporting his viver business and good with his extravagant companion brother lifestyle by to artists. Constantine dealings in and the stock market his poor judgments finally led to financial ruin. First in 1895 a disastrous purchase of shares on bad advice and then in 1900 his failure deliver stocks and securities to Mr. Sheffield Neave on money already provided which brought him before the General Purposes Committee of the Stock Exchange. As Julia Ionides says this was probably due to carelessness, as there was no indication of criminal 83 Stillman, p. 661; Elliott, pp. 136 – 9 44 motive, but despite Luke’s assertion that he was efficient in business in his early days, his heart was never in it.84 When the firm of Meason’s Greek merchant finally goes bust it is because he has overreached himself ‘partly by a desire of gain, and partly by a wish to be a great man in the eyes of his poorer fellow-countrymen…’ and he is the victim of increased competition and playing the dangerous game of allowing ‘open uncovered credits to…agents abroad for three month periods to obtain shipments of produce on commission’.85 But in no time the irrepressible Mr. Velardi is back at work again, his ‘money settled on his wife, villa at Roehampton’. His Greek commercial friends rally round and for the moment, chastened he turns to the legitimate trade of shipping ‘Manchester goods abroad on commission [to] received produce from the Levant upon the same terms’. After the liquidation of the London branch of the family firm George Cavafy is reduced to getting a job as a clerk or sometime manager with a fellow Greek firm trading with the Levant. Mr. Velardi managers to turn his situation round so 84 Julia Ionides, ‘Afterward’, Luke Ionides, Memories, Ludlow, 1996, pp. 79, 90 – 91 & 94 – 95. Luke married Elfrida Bird, the daughter of a doctor in 1869; W.T.C. King, ‘The extent of the London discount market in the middle of the nineteenth century’, Economica, New Series, Vol. 2, No. 7 (1935), 321 – 6, at 322, Sheffield Neave had been Governor of the Bank of England in the 1850s 85 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 188, 191 & 194 45 much so that from his firm being hounded by its creditors as ‘“mere Greek adventurers;” “swindlers;” “scoundrels;” men who had “over-traded;” who had “obtained money on false pretences;” who had commenced without any capital”’ to, as soon as their heads were ‘a little above water, than some of those who had been our greatest enemies and most vehement denouncers, began by degrees to cultivate a sort of business-like friendship for us.’ Mr Velardi was able to continue pursuing his grand schemes his handsome mansion in Westbourne Terrace a ‘most respectable’ man.86 It has been argued that the instability and corruption of the City have been exaggerated. Certainly the ten yearly cycle of financial crises of the middle years of the nineteenth century, and in particular 1856 – 7 and 1868, with the failure banks and financial institutions, were not all the work of foreign speculators.87 Meason’s caricature accusations must have reflected however a view of reality because by 1877 it was felt that the City, as Lionel Cohen put it in his evidence to the Royal Commission, was being 86 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 163 – 4; Liddell, Cafavy, p. 27 King, ‘The extent of the London discount market in the middle of the nineteenth century’, Economica, New Series, Vol. 2, No. 7 (1935), 321 – 6; J.R.T. Hughes, ‘The commercial crisis of 1857’, Oxford Economic. Papers, 1956, 8, 194 - 222; Michael Collins, ‘The Bank of England as Lender of Last Resort, 1857 - 1878’, The Economic History Review, New Series, Vol. 45, No. 1 (1992), 145 – 53; Taylor, 700 - 24 87 46 taken over by ‘adventurers, Jews, Greeks’ and other disreputable types. It was proposed that a test of creed and nationality should be imposed on the Committee of the Stock Exchange. 88 The clan solidarity of the Greeks meant that only they could carry on the trade in Levant trade bills because they form the only nation the natives of which have implicit confidence in one another. Whatever a Greek may be to a foreigner, he is always true to his countrymen.89 Chapman takes the view that Meason was being hard on the Greeks whose belief was that the larger Greek houses, such as the Rallis, Rodocanachis and Ionides took advantage of the difficulties the numerous small Greek houses faced in the volatile Levantine trade by baling them out when things got tough by giving them credit at extortionate rates of ‘often as much as 9% or 10% for three months, being at the rate of 30% or 40% annum’. It was true in general that merchants in the City began to diversify into the financial sector as an insurance in times of difficulty which lead to the establishment of Merchant Banks. A small group of merchants in one area of trade would act as a financial service to the others in that sector and this was particularly true of the Greeks Houses, Ralli, Rodocanachi, 88 89 Kynaston, p. 293 Meason, The Bubbles of Finance, pp. 203 – 4, 207 -8, 210 – 11 & 215 47 Spartali and Argenti. It was perhaps no coincidence then that the leading houses became rich and by the 1860s some of them had formally moved into banking when their traditional business methods became no longer profitable, although a total commitment to finance as in the case of Zarifi Bros. & Co. was apparently frowned upon. Chapman feels that the charge of exploitation though was exaggerated and that the northern textile manufacturers were also often the suppliers of credit. Whether in direct refutation of Meason’s claims the Ralli business was said to be built entirely on cash trading ‘to its available means’ never issuing ‘paper’ and Chapman supposed the Rodocarnachis were unwilling to risk their credit standing with upstart competitors putting down the Greek mutual support to, unlike most Germans, German Jews, Dutch and other migrants, that they arrived at a period of nationalist passion and were slow to anglicise.90 Despite Meason’s prejudice practical considerations meant that Greek firms were drawn into various financial companies and the existing social relations flourished between the Rallis 90 and members of what was known as the ‘Quaker Chapman, Merchant Enterprise in Britain, pp. 160 – 1; Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, pp. 129 & 132; Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, p. 24 48 Confederation’ and the Barings, the Scandinavian Arbuthnots and the Jewish Sassoons.91 Another reason that foreign trade could be risky was the reliance on shipping. Despite the relative peace in many of the routes cargoes transported by sea were at the mercy of uncontrollable events. Court reports highlight the dangers including financial and the standing of the Greeks in England. The case of Vissiglios Colucoridis, the Master of the Elpsis from the Port of Syra, ‘owners unknown’, who absconded with a £35 loan paid to him for repairs so that he could return from Newcastle to Syra, could not have helped the Greek reputation.92 The Scaramangas were brought before the courts by Harris in1872. They were both described in the Court report as ‘cornfactors’ who carried on their business in London. The plaintiffs had bought a cargo of rye from the Scaramangas on behalf of ‘Messrs Bacmeister & Stone, who sold it to Kneist and Trademan, who again sold it to Bolte & Co. of Bremen’. The Scaramangas were shipping this cargo aboard The Bella Leandra, an Italian vessel that set sail Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, pp. 65 – 6; the tenancy of 17 Belgrave Square, the residency of Pandeli Ralli passed to Leontine, Lady Sassoon in 1929, Margaret Harcourt Williams, ‘Belgrave Square in the 20th century - the first 50 years’, Psychiatric Bulletin (2000) 24: 3435, at 34 91 49 from Taganrog in Russia on the 22nd September 1867 bound for Bremen when the ship ran into bad weather. She put into Constantinople on 17th February 1868 for repairs where the Master had to raise funs through a ‘bottomry bond’, a kind of mortgage, from Herman Helbing a merchant of the city. Further bad weather sent the ship to the haven of Malta where further costs for repairs were incurred and the ship did not set sail until the 1st of May arriving in Bremen on the 25th of June. This time funds were raised from Ignazio Buttigeig. In the meantime Bolte & Co. had bought the cargo. When the cargo finally arrived in Bremen the losses could not be redeemed, even after the sail of the ship. The bill of lading were first handed to plaintiffs who passed them on to Bacmeister & Stone who passed them on until they reached Bolte & Co. the final owners of the cargo. Harris acting as trustees of Bolte & Co. brought the action against the Scaramangas and won the case.93 This case amply illustrates the complexity of the dealing in the corn trade and the advantages, getting the money well in advance of the cargo allowing for fast turnover of capital, 92 James Redford Bulwer QC (ed.), The Law Reports: High Court of the Admiralty and Ecclesiastical Courts, Vol. IV, XXXVI – XXXVIII Victoria, London, 1875, pp. 4 – 5 the Elpsis (6161) Dec. 11, 1872 50 but also the disadvantage of making a sale before the goods are in hand and the risk involved. On the other hand perhaps it was better to be acting as the plaintiff in cases of losses at sea as when the Ionides company acted as brokers on behalf of ‘G’ and ‘K’ of Hamburg and were successful in the case they brought against The Pacific Fire and Marine Insurance Company for loss at sea of hides from on board the Socrates from Brazil to Hamburg in 1871.94 The excessive length of time that the The Bella Leandra spent on its voyage from the Black Sea to Bremen can be shown by the round trips that the Spartan, a 916 ton screw and sail ship registered in London and owned by Michael Spartali, of 25 Old Broad Street, took to Odessa and back. It left Cardiff on the 16th of December 1873 and returned by way of Constantinople, Odessa, Malta and Hamburg by the 27th of February 1874. By the 3rd of March it was off again to Odessa via Athens and Constantinople, returning to Dublin on the 2nd of May. By the 6th of May it was leaving Cardiff again for Odessa and the Crimea returning to Cork by the 10th August 1874, having stopped off in Constantinople on 93 James Redford Bulwer QC (ed.), The Law Reports: Court of Common Pleas, Vol. VII, XXXVI Victoria, London, 1872, pp. 481 – 4 & 498, Law Report 7C 94 Montagu Chambers, and Frederick Hoare, (eds.), Law Journal1872: Reports New Series Vol 41, Common Law, London, 1872, p. 33 51 the way. It finally was finally back in Cardiff, its home port, on the 17th of August.95 The case of Scaramanga v. Stamp of 1880 set a president whereby a deviation to save property belonging to a third party is not justifiable in common law. Their steamer the Olympias was carrying a cargo of wheat for a charter party when fellow steamer the Arion was spotted in distress. The weather was fine and there would have been no difficulty in saving the crew, but it was agreemed for a fee that the Olympias was to tow the Arion into Texel, near Amsterdam, but in the process the Olympias went aground and lost her cargo. The case went in favour of the plaintiff for a breach of contract. It was held that the deviation went beyond the bounds of moral justification; that of saving life and the ship-owner was held liable for the loss. 95 96 Barry Stevens, ‘Spartan’, Mariners-L Archives, 2000, voyages 1 - 4 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/mariners/200010/0971278546 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/mariners/200010/0971278617 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/mariners/200010/0971278635 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/mariners/200010/0971279006 Register of Ships, transcribed by Gilbert Provost from the Lloyd’s Register of British and Foreign Shipping 1764 – 2003, 2007 www.reach.net/~sc001198/shipsS2.htm 96 Vidya Venugopal, ‘Deviation and delay during voyage’, Shipping Law Notes, V. M. Syam Kumar (ed.), 7, Dec. 2007, Cochin, India, p. 5 – 6, 52 Family and networks Chapman has suggested that the view that the Greeks formed a close-knit business community circles. was Most not so unique International within Houses merchant were family businesses. Loyalty in the institution was focused on the founding family maintaining this and its and of traditions bringing in and a talent method was of through marriage but it was difficult by this method to maintain the required levels of recruitment. A solution to the problems of succession were large families. Many of the banks were of foreign extraction or if British they were Scots or from the north of England. Chapman suggests that is easy suppose that ‘exiles’ clung together and intermarried, so we would expect to find ethnic and religious groupings such as Hugenot, Jewish, Scottish, Quaker, Lutheran and Greek, but in practice these groups proved weak or ineffective once the alien group had acclimatized itself to the City. The need for cooperation quickly overwhelmed ethnic loyalties. But there was an exception; ‘Apart from the Jews, the racial and religious minority that appeared most clannish is the Greeks’.97 Peter Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, Oxford, 1985, p. 306 97 Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, p. 65 53 The point is endorsed in Loukis Laras that it was the Chiot custom for marriages within the Greek merchant class to be arranged. Each family was anxious to form alliances with its equals, and as the choice was restricted, the competition for suitable partners began at an early age. The aristocratic exclusiveness of those who intermarried and the narrow limits of Chios society, necessarily brought about in the end marriages between near relatives.98 At 38 in 1831 Pandia Ralli married his second cousin Marietta Scaramanga, aged 21 and from a fellow Chiot trading family, in the Chapel of the Russian Embassy. She was living in London with her youngest of nine brothers, Dimitrios. Laurent and Eustratius were established in Russia whereas Pandias, Jean and Loucas were based in France. Ambrosios lived in Greece and became influential in politics.99 Demitrios (1814 1867) had studied medicine in Paris where he met Corais before becoming a senior executive for Ralli Brothers. Family ties were strengthened when he married Julia Ralli, daughter of Eustratios in 1844.100 When one branch gets maintain 98 the in trouble standing it of was the valuable House by to be having able to wealthy Vikelas, p. 5 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, pp. 48 – 9 & 58. Eustratios Ralli married Marigo Mavrocordatou there in 1825 100 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 54 99 54 partners abroad as in the case of the Rallis and Rodocanachis.101 The Ralli Brothers succession passed from uncle to nephew. Pandia Ralli attached Stephen, the son of Augustus his brother in Marsailles, to the London firm in 1851. According to Gennadius he had shown the promise that merited him being singled out as a partner in the future. Circumstances may also have played a part. Pandia’s eldest child was a daughter, Julia, who married out of the Greek colony. Her husband, Charles Monk, was the son of an Anglican Bishop and in business terms an unsuitable candidate. His two sons died young. Stephen Ralli continued the Chiot tradition of marrying while ‘still a young man…[a] bride, from within his own circle, but from another branch of the same extensive family’. This was Marietta the daughter of Anthony Ralli. His business partner was his cousin Alexander Vlastos.102 In Loukis Laras … the success of the Chiots’, not only in the management of their municipal affairs before the revolution, but also of their commercial organization after the destruction of Chios 101 Chapman, The Rise of Merchant Banking, p. 63 Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, pp. 27 & p. 34; Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, pp. 46 & 127, family tree. Petros Ralli (1837 – 1868) also married a Ralli, Alexandra. His older brother, Stefanos died as a baby in 1834 102 55 is attributed to this discipline of forging ties by intermarriage and ‘living in close union’ so that families ‘became strong’ and increased their power.103 The particular success of the Ralli family, aside from their business acumen, may be put down to the disciplined way in which each brother was assigned to a territory and stuck to it until the call came to do otherwise. No other organization responded with such dedication. Arranged or advantageous marriages were not only the prerogative of the Chiots and principle. the other Thomas, Greek Argenti families and followed Co. was set the up same by Constantinos Ipliktis in 1822 under the name of Nicolaos Thomas, who was brother-in-law to his wife’s sister and John Argentis, possibly one of his cousins who was to be married to his daughter Anthea.104 The name Ipliktis was believed to be Turkish denoting a cotton or textile merchant, so the tradition was that the Ionides family was already established in the textile business before they came to London. Constantine did not use 103 Vikelas, pp. 95 - 6 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 68; Butterworth, Ionides Family Tree, p. 1; Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 4; Timotheos Catsiyannis, Constantine Ionidis-Ipliktzis 1775-1852 and the Ionidi family, p. 9 104 56 his ‘Turkish’ name, the Greeks did not have surnames, as he believed it difficult to pronounce in English.105 Argenti, Thomas & Co., moved from Tokenhouse Yard in the City to 9 Finsbury Circus in 1829. Finsbury Circus had become so Greek it was necessary for the premises to become the first Greek Chapel of the new merchant colony and the business rented the ground floor from the ‘Greek Community’, which was based on the second floor.106 Constantine’s son Alexander had come to London in 1827 at the age of 16 and it was he who took the name Ionides and founded Ionides & Co. in 1833. He moved from Cheetham Hill where he was living with his new wife, Euterpe, from a leading Constantinopolitan family, Sgouta, to Finsbury Circus with the business. By 1837 he had become a British subject.107 Constantine died in 1852 in Athens on his way to Constantinople to raise capital by selling his property. His son Alexander settled in Manchester in 1827 changing his name to Ionides. His son Constantine, at the age of 17 (1850) entered his father’s business in Manchester, five years later he went to Romania in the grain trade, representing his father’s firm. Between 1861 and 1863 the sons, Alecco and Luke went travelling, if not with the express purpose of maintaining family 105 Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), pp. 1 - 4 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 68; Ionides, Ion, p. 4; Liddell, p. 19 107 Ionides, Ion, pp. 13 – 4 & 43; Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 6 106 57 links, to Athens and Constantinople. Here they met their relatives and no doubt and it would be surprising if this had no bearing on maintaining the network. Luke also went on to Brailla where his elder brother Constantine was presumably engaged in business. By 1864 Constantine was back in England with a wife, Agothonike, and three young children, where he entered the London Stock Exchange as working on half commission for Clapham Bros. In 1866 he started up on his own with a partner called Barker as stock and share brokers in the City, continuing successfully as Ionides & Ionides and Ionides Constantine. His son credits his father with averting a financial crisis in the 1870s by warning the City that Turkey was in arrears on her loans and was only making payments by raising further loans. In 1882 Constantine retired from active business having realized a considerable fortune.108 Of Constantine’s City friends only one was Greek, Stephen Ralli, the others were his partner Henry Barker, Lionel Cohen, Lord Swathling, Merton Messel, Henry Raphael, Sir William Crookes, Edwin Arnold, Joseph Pulley M.P., (?) Mahony and in Constantinople, George Zarifi.109 Constantine’s son Alexander carried on the family tradition by studying abroad, but the plans for his future seem unclear. His father decided for him to be an architect and he went to Athens for that purpose and to learn Greek, which indicates that perhaps this was not a wholehearted decision and by 1881 Alexander was working as a stockbroker for J. & A. Scringeous & Co. It was evidently seen as part of the training of each generation that they study abroad 108 Ionides, Ion, pp. 2 & 4; Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 6; Luke Ionides, Memories, p. 30 58 and travel, meaning the cultural centres of Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean. Alexander’s contemporary Michael Schilazza (sic) was sent on a ‘wanderjchr’ by his father before entering Stock Exchange.110 Once the Ionides firm was set up George Cavafy came to London from Constantinople in around 1827, to work as a clerk in the Tokenhouse office. By March 1834 he too was married, to Thomas' daughter Mariora. His brother Peter John followed to England in 1836, where he lived in Manchester until 1839 Manchester moving and to London Liverpool till in 1841, 1846 when then he living in returned to London. He worked for Ionides & Co. until 1844 then for Cassavetti, Cavafy & Co. and in 1849 with George as Cavafy Brothers. In April 1849 at Neochori (Yenikoy) on the Upper Bosphorus he married Hericleia (1835 - 1899) daughter of George Photiades (1800 - 18910 a diamond merchant and member of a distinguished Chiot family established in the Phanar by 1680. Peter John returned to manage the Liverpool branch of the firm leaving his wife at his mother's house, where she gave birth to George, Jan.1850. Brother George wanted Peter John, who was there then, to go to Alexandria to open a branch there and to be joint manager in Cairo with Emmanuel 109 110 A.C. Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 41 Ionides, Ion, pp. 31 – 5; Ionides, Ion: (Notes and Index), p. 45 59 Pittaridis (married to sister Maria). Peter John however returned to England with his family. In August 1850 applied from 8 New Bond St. for British nationality: the certificate of naturalization Metaxas in dated 13 Eleutheros Kosmos August (article by Kyriakos Athens, 6 May 1973). The family lived at 47 Stamford Hill where Peter John II (Peter) was born 12 March 1851, baptized in London on the 24th, with Mariora as godmother. Also in the Ionides circle but unrelated to them were the Spartalis. They were of Phanariot descent by way of Smyrna, where they had been successful merchants in grain and fruit. Around the time of the Turkish reprisals in 1820 they abandoned their business and left for Trieste. Finally they arrived in London where they set up a partnership, Sparali and Lascaridis. Michael Spartali who took over the business was only an infant when the family arrived in England and he never saw Greece, but when the time came, the tradition was for a suitable match to be made. The marriage was arranged by an exchange of portraits and Euphrosyne Valsami was chosen from a Greek family in Genoa.111 In this manner the first 111 generations expectations of continuity were set. Elliott, p. 11 – 12. In 1846 George Lascarides married Katherine Ionides (1826 1862), the youngest of Constantine Ipliktis’ eleven children and sister of Alexander Ionides, Butterworth, p. 3 60 Alexander Ionides’ son gained his business experience working at the Spartali office in 38 Finsbury Circus, and the second generation friendships were initially within their circle, despite the fact they lived at some distance from one another; The Spartalis in Hornsey and Muswell Hill and the Ionides in Tulse Hill.112 No doubt it was felt by the parents that future marriages would develop from this intimacy. The tradition of arranged marriages came under increasing pressure as the century progressed. By the time of the publication of Loukis Laras in 1881 Tzifos noted the change in the ‘national life’. The custom of arranged marriage had degenerated into one of ‘consideration of material interests alone, and into questions of dowery…’.113 Given the attitudes to the influx of foreigners into Victorian London expounded by Meason and others, it would be a surprise if the Greeks themselves were not aware of them. All travelers…praise the family virtues, the social decorum, the political good sense of the Chiots, their commercial aptitude, free from guile or craft, the firmness of their character, their skill in the arts, their industry, their sobriety.114 112 Elliott, p. 14 Vikelas, p. 95 114 J. Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli: A Biographical Memoir, London, 1902, p. 10 113 61 In 1902 John Gennadius penned a eulogy to the Ralli family and the Chiots in the form of a memoir to the recently deceased Stephen Ralli, the ‘president, Nestor and father’ of the Greek community in London.115 For Gennadius the Rallis in particular and the Chiots in general represented everything noble in the Greek character. He goes to great lengths to extol the virtues of the islanders quoting eminent sources from Herodotus and Thucydides by way of Korais, to Finlay, who even had a good word to say about them, and of course, Korais himself. Gennadius’ purpose is to show the Chiots as the leading lights in a moral yet commercially successful ideal of Greekness. The Rallis had set forth into the world armed with their strong inherent values and continents created without a great losing enterprise their dignity spanning or many compromising their morality. They had successfully married capitalist and Christian virtues through their sobriety and fair dealing and had never lost their commitment to Orthodoxy and the Greek nation. In the City no one was ‘better informed in commercial affairs’ than Alexander Vlastos, who combined his business acumen with the ideals of the scholar and patriot, thus the achievement of the Chiot merchants was no mere 62 narrow-minded venal pursuit.116 For these reasons they could be held up as a model to Greeks everywhere of the new Greece. Even as late as 1979, when Ralli Brothers was no longer a private partnership but part of a larger organization, the company ethos was enshrined in the Staff Instruction Book of 1881, and quoted in the motto: ‘our fulfillment important of than moral the obligations letter of under the contract contract’, is the more first consideration being ‘the honour of the house’.117 Gennadius was close to Stephen Ralli and Alexander Ralli, having worked for Ralli Brothers and been trained by them. In his words they Both did honour to the name of Greeece, and their memory will ever be held in gratitude and blessedness by the many hundreds of young Greeks who in their firm have been taught how to prosper by probity, and hoe to attain honour by conscientious hard work.118 The focus by Gennadius on building up the Ralli image is understandable in a his memorial to Stephen Ralli, but it can also be informative through what it is left out and its 115 Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, p. 29 Gennadius, Stephen A. Ralli, pp. 27 and note 30 & p. 35 117 Bowater Organisation, History and Activities of the Ralli Trading Group: Commodity Merchants for 160 Years, London, 1979, pages unnumbered, but at page 2. The partnership of Ralli Brothers was incorporated as a private company in 1931, it became a public company in 1941 and was bought out by the General Guarantee Corporation Ltd. In 1959 116 63 hints at a subtext. Gennadius, as a champion of modern Greece, either in his official capacity as Ambassador in London or as a private citizen, was forever aware of how the outside world viewed the Greeks, but this piece was not written initially as a defence against outside attack but for Greeks.119 The implication is that the Chiots embody a kind of purity, not found on the mainland.120 It is not a racial purity in the strict sense because many of these families traced their lineage to Genoese forbears, but this gives them some nobility. A double pride is taken in descendants of the ‘forty families’ that could claim descent from Genoa or Constantinople and Chios.121 The Nineteenth century merchant families of Chios continued a tradition of maritime trade penetrated the begun by Eastern their Genoese Mediterranean forbears to trade who in had bulk cargoes such as wool and grain in the later Middle Ages.122 In 118 Gennadius’ account the baton of command is passed Gennadius, ‘Introduction’, pp. 54 - 5 It was originally published in the Nea Imera of Trieste, see the Preface to the English translation 120 J. Gennadius, Notes on the recent murders by brigands in Greece, London, 1870, pp. 115, 118 – 9. Gennadius claims that brigandage on the Greek mainland is carried out by Slavs or ‘Vallachs’ recognizable by their lower physical type 121 Catsiyannis, Pandia Stephen Rallis, p. 7 122 Ernle Bradford, Mediterranean: Portrait of a Sea, Harmondsworth, 2000, p. 378. The Venetians on the other hand had favoured the lighter and more expensive commodities, such as the spices from the Orient. Both city-states vied for privileges in Constantinople to facilitate this trade and gain access to the Black Sea markets, Bradford, Mediterranean, p. 380 – 2; Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the 119 64 seamlessly from one Ralli generation to the next. But where are the other Greeks of the London community, those from the rest of Greece and Asia Minor? They are conspicuous by their absence. Greeks from other parts may have been too close to the Turks, or perceived as too ‘Oriental’ or Levantine in their attitudes and behaviour for comfort. For whatever reason they do not figure. For the purpose of this chapter it is the emphasis on the business ethics that is the important theme and in that sense Gennadius is at pains to distance the Chiots from what became associated with Levantine practice. By extension the lives of the Rallis can be used as a model for the rest of Greece including the diaspora. Roman Empire: Vol. VIII, Felipe Fernadez –Armesto (ed.), London, 2000, p. 62