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Christakis Zografos

Christakis Zografos (Greek: Χρηστάκης Ζωγράφος, Turkish: Hristaki Zoğrafos Efendi, Albanian: Kristaq Zografi; 1820 – 19 August 1898) was an Ottoman Greek banker, benefactor and one of the distinguished personalities of the Greek community of Constantinople (modern Istanbul).

Zografos was born in the village of Qestorat in southern Albania, when the region was under Ottoman rule. He was of Albanian descent.

He attended the Zosimaia School in Ioannina and then went to Constantinople to join his father's business there. He was initially a co-partner in a small money changing stand at Galata. During 1854–1881, Zografos became one of the major creditors of the Ottoman state. He also became one of its leading bankers and financiers and president of the Ottoman capital's trolley company. He was awarded by three sultans, sat on the Imperial Board of Estimate and served as president of the Ecumenical Patriarchate's Clerico-Lay Advisory Board. Because of his high social status he was widely known as Christakis Efendi (Lord Christakis).

In the 1860s, Zografos was part of a committee of Albanian intellectuals and other personalities approved by Grand Vizier Ali Pasha to choose an alphabet for the Albanian language. After elaborations, they chose a mostly Latin alphabet with some Greek letters, though the authorities did not accept it.

Following the Fire of Pera in 1870, Zoğrafos bought the damaged Naum Theatre and had it rebuilt as what is now the Çiçek Pasajı.

Zografos was known as Sultan Murad V's personal jeweller. After the successful coup against Sultan Abdülaziz, he was entrusted with the sultan's jewellery collection, as it was assumed it would not fetch its true value in Constantinople. Zografos was sent to France to try and sell it and never returned to the city.

Zografos lavishly endowed educational and other facilities for the Greek communities living in regions that belonged, at that time, to the Ottoman Empire.

He offered large sums of money for the establishment of two middle schools in Constantinople: one in Beyoğlu (Pera), the other a school for girls in Yeniköy on the Bosphorus. Both were called Zographeion Lyceum in his memory. He also sponsored the rebuilding of a Greek library in the city and gave 1,000-franc endowments to the universities of Munich and Paris for awards in the fields of Greek literature and history.

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Ottoman empire banker
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