Lavreotika

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1873 share of the company Ta Μetallourgeia tou Lavriou

The Lavrion issue (Greek: Λαυρεωτικό ζήτημα, romanized: Lavreotiko zitima), most commonly known as the Lavreotika (Λαυρεωτικά, 'Lavrion Affair') was the legal dispute between the French-Italian mining company Roux - Serpieri - Fressynet CIE and the Greek state regarding the exploitation of Lavrion mines. The dispute concerned the public during the period of 1869–1875 and resulted in a stock-market scandal in which stocks were sold in a far higher price compared to their real one and at a time when Greece did not yet have a stock market.

The mines of Lavrion were operated during the time of the Athenian Democracy, but, after the defeat of the Athenians in the Peloponnesian War, they were shut down.[1] Interest for the mines grew again during the 1860s when a mineralogist composed a report stating that the operation of the mines could be profitable for the state.[2] In 1864, Giovanni Serpieri, an Italian businessman, created along with others the Roux - Serpieri - Fressynet C.E., securing a permit from the government for the operation of the mines.[2]

The dispute

The scandal

References

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