ABSTRACT

Banking historiography often does not sufficiently take into account bankers’ deliberations of their decision making, but rather limits investigation to considerations of profit maximisation. This book shows that the decision-making processes of nineteenth-century bankers contemplating high-risk financial markets like Greece are just as complex as present-day investment decisions.

The book, now published in English after a first German edition, offers in-depth studies of decision making in concrete historical situations, considering political and economic circumstances and also the individual background of the actors concerned, including a reflection on the influence of cultural movements such as Philhellenism. Employing methodological inspirations from the field of behavioural finance, the book analyses a broad range of published and unpublished English, French, Greek, German and Swiss sources on European investment in Greece between 1821 and the Balkan wars. Additionally, rich insights into Greek economic history, the economic integration of the country into Europe and long-lasting European stereotypes of Southern Europe and Greece are provided; this furthers understanding of the historical background of the Greek financial crisis after 2009.

In combining the perspectives of financial, economic, political and cultural history, this book is primarily significant for students of various fields of historiography. Due to its strong awareness of methodological questions, it is also of great interest to academic historians. In addition, the strong public interest in the Greek financial crisis after 2009 and its consequences for Europe will, thirdly, attract the interest of a broader public.

part I|25 pages

Introduction

part II|336 pages

Foreign investment in Greece in the nineteenth century – nine case studies

chapter 1|28 pages

Philanthropy as a marketing strategy

Loans for Greece during her struggle for independence in 1824/1825

chapter 2|37 pages

Liberalism in restoration times

The banker Jean-​Gabriel Eynard as the founder of the Greek National Bank (1841)

chapter 3|50 pages

Banking business between Saint-​Simonism and philology

The Bavarian-​French d’Eichthal family

chapter 4|41 pages

Antique mines molten again

Lavrion

chapter 5|29 pages

At the service of the chancellor

Bleichröder and the Greek loan of 18891

chapter 6|40 pages

Paris as the new Athens

The Canal of Corinth 1882–1893

chapter 7|42 pages

Grounded in a marsh

The Lake Copais Company

chapter 8|35 pages

Incasso International

Building up confidence by debt redemption?1

chapter 9|32 pages

Currant trade in Greece

‘Monopoly or Death!’1

part III|15 pages

Conclusion