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TRICOUPIS (or TRICOuPI), CHARILAOS (1...

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 267 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TRICOUPIS (or TRICOuPI), CHARILAOS (1832—1896)  , Greek statesman, was born at
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Nauplia in 1832 . After studying law and literature in Athens and in Paris, he was sent to
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London in 1852 as an attache of the Greek legation . By 1863 he had risen to be charge d'affaires, but he aimed rather at a
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political than a
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diplomatic career . In 1865, therefore, after he had concluded the negotiations for the cession by
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Great Britain to
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Greece of the Ionian Islands, he entered the Greek chamber of deputies, and in the following
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year was made
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foreign minister, at the early age of
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thirty-four . In 1875 he became prime minister for a few months, but had no opportunity even to begin carrying out the policy which he had in mind . This policy was to develop the resources of his country so as to create an army and a
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fleet, and thus to give Greece the power to acquire a leading place among the nations of south-eastern
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Europe . It was not until 1882 that he was able to take
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measures to this end . In that year he became prime minister for the third time (his second period of office, two years earlier, had lasted only for a few months), and at once set about the task of putting Greek
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finance upon a firmer basis, and of increasing the prosperity of the country by making roads,
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railways and harbours . He was defeated at the general election in 1885, but in the following year he resumed office, and again took up the labour of economic and
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financial reform . His difficulties were now increased by the large
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expenditure which had been incurred for military preparations while he had been out of office as the result of the union effected between Bulgaria and eastern Rumelia . The Greeks had demanded from
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Turkey a compensation for this shifting of the balance of power, and had prepared to enforce their demand by an
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appeal to arms . The Great Powers, however, had interfered, and by blockading the Piraeus had compelled Greece to remain quiet .

Tricoupis, nevertheless, believed that he could in a few years raise the value of Greek paper currency to par, and upon that assumption all his calculations were based . Unfortunately for himself and his country, he was not able to make his belief good . His dexterity in finance called forth general admiration, and his schemes for the construction of roads and railways met with a certain amount of success . But at last he was obliged to recognize that the warnings offered to him had been sound . Greece could not meet her obligations . Tricoupis tried to make terms with the creditors of his nation, but he failed in this also . The first taxation which he proposed aroused great hostility, and in
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January 1895 he resigned . At the general election, four months later, he and his party were defeated . He at once retired from public
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life, and soon afterwards the disease declared itself which eventually proved fatal . He died at
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Cannes on the lrth of
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April 1896 . The faults of excessive ambition and of a far too sanguine optimism, which marked Tricoupis' character, could not prevent him from being regarded, even during his lifetime, as the foremost Greek statesman of his time . He was not a favourite with the populace, nor was he beloved so much as respected by his followers .

By nature he was reserved—his

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nickname was " the Englishman " —and he had no sympathy with the arts of the demagogue . But, both in the ranks of his own party and by the nation at large, his abilities and his force of character were unquestioned . It was his misfortune that thecircumstances of the time did not allow his wide schemes for the benefit of his country to be carried into effect . (H . H .

End of Article: TRICOUPIS (or TRICOuPI), CHARILAOS (1832—1896)
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