Τρίτη 21 Μαρτίου 2017

Charilaos Trikoupis





Charilaos Trikoupis                                  ΧΑΡΙΛΑΟΣ  ΤΡΙΚΟΥΠΗΣ
Born in Nauplio, 1832                   Died in Cannes, 1896
  
                                

Section 5, Number 896
The Family Plot: Charilaos and his sister Sophia in the background; their parents Spyros and Katerina in the foreground. 

Charilaos Trikoupis: cosmopolitan, multi-lingual, and an accomplished dancer, served as Greece’s Prime Minister seven times between the years 1875 to 1895.  He brought  something new to the Greek political scene – a coherent and liberal policy of internal reform accompanied by a more reasoned foreign policy (1)    Trikoupis had tremendous self-confidence, a quality that neither the English or the French, used to controlling Greece from behind the scenes, would entirely forgive. He was also eloquent. When he spoke in parliament, foreign officials and diplomats listened; his speeches were widely published abroad.  In spite of his failure to fully realize his vision, historians still rate him as a colossus in the political history of Greece.


His statue (by  Thomas Thomopoulos)  outside of the old Parliament building on Stadiou Street. Emblazoned under the angel’s protective arm are the words “Greece wants to live (prosper), and will live (prosper)

 His Life
Trikoupis came from an illustrious family. His mother was the sister of  Greek prime minister  Alexandros Mavrokordatos His father, Spyridon,  the son of a  primate in Missolonghi, had fought in the Greek revolution and served as the Greece’ first prime Minister in 1833. (2) 

  Charilaos studied law in Athens, and then continued his studies in Paris and London. In England, he fit in so well with the ambiance that he gained the nickname “the Englishman”. In 1862 , at the age of 30, he became attaché of the Second National Convention of the Greek community in London. In 1863 he followed in his father’s footsteps becoming chargé d’affaires at the Greek Embassy there, where he skillfully handled the negotiations for the 1864 treaty in which Great Britain surrendered the Ionian Islands to the Greek nation. 
 
But it was politics at home, not diplomacy abroad, that interested Harilaos.

In 1865, at the age of 33, he was first elected to the Greek parliament, representing  Missolonghi. He quickly became the  Minister of Foreign Affairs. As a newly minted minister, he requested that foreign ambassadors first visit him in his offices rather than him going to theirs as had been the custom. It was a symbolic gesture of independence from foreign influence, and one that has remained the protocol in Greece ever since.


This photograph may have been  used by Thomopoulos for his statue!

By 1872, Trikoupis had already founded the Fifth Party (Πέμπτο Κόμμα), the first party in Greek history to be based on a clear set of principles rather than on the charisma of its leader. He began to attract  progressive politicians to his point of view. In 1874 he wrote the now famous article Who is to Blame? (Τις Πταίει;)  in which he  harshly criticized the existing political system, in particular the role of the  king. The king, using  his  constitutional prerogative, (3) had chosen the leader of a minority party to become  Prime Minister rather than the leader of the party which had gained the most votes. This undemocratic  constitutional right of Greek royalty encouraged political leaders to prefer gaining the king’s favor over the wishes of the majority.

In another article, Past and Present, Trikoupis presented a majority rule proposal: that parliament must be led by the leader of the party which gained the most votes. This principle, so logical to us today, was reluctantly accepted by the king and, according to its principle Trikoupis, as head of his newly formed ‘New Party’, became Greece’s prime minister for the first time On April 27, 1875
The new system encouraged small parties to band together to achieve the needed majority and, as a result, a two party system developed: Trikoupis’ forward looking New Party versus the Nationalist Party, a group of entrenched Conservatives led first by Alexandros Koumoundouros and later by Theodoros Deligiannis. They represented the ‘old guard’ families of Greece who saw no ‘possible benefit’ in changing the  ‘patron-client’ system in which they had prospered. The last thing they wanted was real reform.

Political power changed hands in a dizzying number of elections during these years: the conservative’s populist choices would attempt to defeat any progressive moves made by Tricoupis during his tenure. Deligiannis would often say, without apparent embarrassment that, as a policy, he was  against “anything that Trikoupis was for”! 

 Trikoupis famed dancing prowess  was certainly tested as he and Deligiannis embraced each other in a drawn out political fandango that could not end well for Greece.

A cartoonist at the time depicting Trikoupis and Deligiannis going at it like school  boys.





Painting by N. Orlov which depicts a sitting of the Parliament in the 1880s. Harilaos Trikoupis is at the rostrum and Theodoros Diligiannis, his arch enemy, is sitting in the benches.  Athens National Historical Museum.
 The Era of Trikoupis
In spite of this, the years between 1882 and 1897 are still called ‘the era of Trikoupis’ because of his effort to modernize and expand the economy, re-organize the civil service, complete important public works projects, and encourage urban development. He believed that only a strong Greece with a growing economy and a reorganized army and navy could succeed and properly represent Greek national interests. Thessaly and the part of Southern Epirus around Arta had became part of an expanded Greek state in 1881, making changes even more necessary and reforms vital. 
Under Trikoupis the Corinth Canal was completed and four new rail lines were created. Consider this: from 1882 until 1890, the road network in Greece went from 1,359 kms to 5,221 kms, and the rail network from 19kms to 1,300 kms! For this last accomplishment, Trikoupis is today known as ‘the father of the railroad’. (4)
However…
The reorganization of the state, the resulting increase in civil servants, the cost of strengthening of the armed forces, and the introduction of huge public works resulted in heavy financial burdens. Loans were made, taxes were increased, and customs duties were raised against imports, especially luxury goods. 
Trikoupis  was asking the Greek people for more sacrifices than their ability or willingness to accept. It wasn’t long before farmers and the poorly paid city dwellers began to see his costly expansion programs as monsters eating their money, money that many would have preferred to be spent on the more immediate improvement of their own lives. The conservative opposition was not slow to fan these flames of malcontent. 

  Biographer Lyndia Tricha writes: It was as if Trikoupis was a pediatrician and the Greek people the baby: every time the country became ill, they called on him to cure them even if the therapy which he offered was painful, but when the problem was momentarily alleviated and the fear was overcome, the ‘child’ would distance himself from the doctor  - and vote against him. (5)
.
Trikoupis’ Athens 

During the Trikoupis years, Athens changed from a village into a city. It now had many impressive and beautiful buildings, most of which were gifts of wealthy Athenian benefactors. Many were created under the watchful eye of the brilliant architect Ernst Ziller. In spite of difficulties, the Trikoupis years  were a period of growth and optimism in Greece. Trikoupis’ own impressive mansion on Academias Street was practically next door to Ernst Ziller’s. The avenues of Athens were then lined with such stately homes.


It was torn down in 1936

Trikoupis lived with his unmarried sister Sophia whom he loved dearly.




In spite of her rather austere appearance, informed gossip reports that, as a young woman, Sophia had an affair with none other than her brother’s great rival Theodoros Deligiannis! Athens was a small town back then and strange liasons did occur...

Trikoupis remained a bachelor all of his life although Georgios Souris (Γ. Σουρής), the editor and writer of the satiric magazine Romios targeted him with a totally untranslatable ditty: «επιθυμώ αλήθεια να δω και τον Τρικούπη, που του ΄χει γίνει τώρα ο έρωτας κουνούπι», having him smitten by love’s arrow – a not so subtle reference to Trikoupi’s long affair of the heart (and possibly more) with the Baroness Maria Von Trauttenberg, the wife of the Austrian ambassador to Greece. (6)

The Economic Crisis 

In order to achieve his goals, the Trikoupi’s government had made huge loans in the international money market, loans that caused the Greek debt to spiral upward into the stratosphere.  Trikoupis could not stop the economic death spiral and that led to his famous 1893 admission in parliament: “Unfortunately we are bankrupt”. Greece defaulted on all foreign loans and all non-essential spending was immediately cut. 

In the elections of April 16, 1895, his party suffered a humiliating defeat and he was voted out of parliament by his Missolonghi constituents. 

He left for Europe. His absence from the political scene was soon felt and in absentia his friends put up his name for election in Valtos in Aitoloakarnania where he was elected by a landslide in 1896 but, unknown to them, he was already gravely ill. 
 
His Death

  Trikoupis died on March 30, 1896 in Cannes at the very time the time that the first Olympic Games were being held in Athens. (7)  Apparently both his sister and the baroness were at his side. It is impossible to know the  facts about his relationship with the baroness  because his sister edited his  letters with an eye on ‘propriety’ before allowing them to be published.
His political enemy, Theodoros Deligiannis, refused to release a Navy vessel to bring Trikoupis back home, so his friends covered the cost. First among the donors was wealthy Andreas Syngros



The Funeral of Harilaos Trikoupis.
 
At his own request, he was buried without state fanfare and was laid to rest in the  First cemetery of Athens. Each  grave in the enclosure is adorned with a simple wooden cross – quite a contrast to the grand tombs of many other politicians. (8)
 

On national holidays, his grave is festooned with flowers and Greeks flags 
   
Some have called Trikoupis a failure, but most agree that he a visionary who managed to guide the Greek state into the 20th century. He had even envisioned a bridge spanning the Corinthian Gulf between Rion and Antirion – something the technology of his day could not have accomplished. But when the bridge did become a reality in 2004, it was named in his honour.

The Map



Section 5, Number 896


Footnotes

1.     No Greek politician of that era ever abandoned the ‘Great idea’ of the expansion of Greece until Constantinople, but Trikoupis, unlike his conservative rivals, saw the enhancing and strengthening of the existing state  as his first priority.

2.     Almost all Greek politicians during the nineteenth century and on into the 1900s came from either Phanariot families who had been prominent during the Ottoman era or primates, large landowners  and fighters in the Greek struggle for independence) from the Peloponnese or Mainland Greece.  It was as essential a prerequisite for power as, say, serving in the American military used to be in the U.S.

3.     The Constitution of 1864 had given the king the power to choose the prime minister.

4.     1835 was the first year that a proposal for a rail network was proposed. A rail line between Piraeus and the Thission was first approved when Mavrokordatos was Prime Minister in 1855. 
5.     «Χαρίλαος Τρικούπης - Μια βιογραφική περιήγηση», της Λύντια Τρίχα.
6.     Unfortunately we cannot find a picture of Maria…
7.     Trikoupis had not been in favour of the Olympics for many of the same reasons many did not want them in 2004 – too much money spent during a time of economic difficulty for too little gain. On the other hand, his populist rival Deliyiannis wanted to go full speed ahead  for the “Glory of Greece”.
8.      The   Greek writer Alexandros Papadiamantis  published a moving eulogy in the Acropolis newspaper. See https://www.sansimera.gr/anthology/446.




Sources
http://www.kathimerini.gr/807580/interactive/epikairothta/hgetes/xarilaos-trikoyphs
http://www.hellenicparliament.gr/UserFiles/f3c70a23-7696-49db-9148-f24dce6a27c8/trikoupis_1.pdf
http://www.patris.gr/articles/291290?PHPSESSID=#.WKbHL_I2jcs

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