The Bank of Romania (Romanian: Banca României, French: Banque de Roumanie), from 1903 Bank of Roumania Ltd., was Romania's oldest bank and its largest financial institution in the late 19th century,[2]: 329 created and controlled by the Ottoman Bank until its nationalization in 1948.
History
In 1856, the London-based Ottoman Bank opened a branch in the Danube port city of Galați, and in 1861 opened a second branch in Bucharest. In 1863, the two branches were taken over by the Imperial Ottoman Bank headquartered in Constantinople (known by its French acronym BIO, for Banque Impériale Ottomane), which replaced the Ottoman Bank.
Following the formation of the United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia, domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza encouraged the formation of domestically headquartered banks. In 1865 he authorized the Bank of Romania, which was formally established in early 1866 and took over the viable business of the BIO's two existing branches,[3] while the BIO retained the branches' troubled assets which it only fully liquidated in 1872. The Anglo-Austrian Bank also participated in the new venture.[4] Its first chairman was statesman Ion Ghica.[5] It was initially granted a privilege to issue banknotes, but that was revoked in 1869 under Cuza's successor Carol of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.[6] It also obtained the country's Tobacco concession, and the Romanian royal family maintained an account at the bank for some time.[2]: 329
By the 1890s, the bank had an office in London at 7, Great Winchester Street.[7] In 1903, because of Romanian legislation that did not allow it to further extend its activity as a foreign-controlled domestic bank,[8] it was reorganized so that the London office became a fully-fledged subsidiary of the BIO, the Bank of Roumania Ltd., and the operation in Romania became that British bank's Bucharest branch.[9] (The Galați branch appears to have been closed by then.) As such, it was no longer privileged,[2]: 329 but was one of four foreign banks active in Bucharest before World War I (the others being Banca Generala Româna, est. 1895; Banca de Credit Român, est. 1904; and Banca Comercială Română, est. 1906), whose aggregate assets represented half of those of the nine largest domestic banks by 1911.[10] Nevertheless, the bank was conservatively managed by the BIO,[2]: 329 and gradually lost market share.
Like other Romanian banks, it suspended most of its activity during World War I between 1916 and 1919.[2]: 332 By the early 1930s, the London head office had moved to 73-76, King William Street.[1] The bank was nationalized in 1948, together with the rest of the Romanian banking sector.[6] The London entity was liquidated in 1951.[11]
See also
Notes
- 1 2 "Ottoman Bank (advert)" (PDF), The Levant Trade Review, Istanbul, March 1931
- 1 2 3 4 5 Alfred Bonafous (1922), "Les Grandes banques d'affaires de Roumanie", Revue d'économie politique, Paris: Editions Dalloz, 36 (3): 323–340, JSTOR 24683679
- ↑ Daniel Dumitran; Valer Moga (2013). Economy and Society in Central and Eastern Europe. Münster: LIT Verlag. p. 119.
- ↑ André Autheman (1996). "III. Les débuts de la Banque impériale ottomane". La Banque impériale ottomane. Paris: Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique : Comité pour l'Histoire Economique et Financière de la France.
- ↑ Ruxandra Bratu (17 February 2021). "#Anul 1866 în istoria României: Începe să funcţioneze Banca României, devenită ulterior Bank of Roumania Ltd". Agrepres.
- 1 2 Ionuț Bălan (21 April 2020). "The Forgotten Capitalism: Listed Banks, Exchange Rate at "Mitita the Ruble Clipper"". Biz Magazine.
- ↑ The Australian Handbook (incorporating New Zealand, Fiji, and New Guinea) and Shippers' and Importers' Directory for 1892, London: Gordon and Gotch, p. 80
- ↑ "Banque de Roumanie". Archives nationales du monde du travail.
- ↑ Cristian Bichi (2018). "Foreign Banks in Romania: A Historical Perspective". In Kostas P. Kostis (ed.). Modern Banking in the Balkans and West-European Capital in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Routledge.
- ↑ John R. Lampe (March 1975), "Varieties of Unsuccessful Industrialization: The Balkan States Before 1914", Journal of Economic History, Cambridge University Press, 35 (1): 77, JSTOR 2119155
- ↑ "Liquidation of the Bank of Roumania Ltd., a British company. Code RR file 1111". The National Archives.