Political and economic changes in the eastern Mediterranean encouraged Greek immigration to Tunis in the early nineteenth century. Although the number of Greeks was limited, they managed to obtain significant economic power. They became partners with the Bey and soon integrated into the local political elite. The article analyses the main entrepreneurial activities of the Greeks who settled in Tunis and their role in the local economy. It discusses the political status of the Greeks who settled in Tunis during the nineteenth century and their interrelationships with the political elite. It is also important to examine the case of those Greeks who, although they arrived in Tunis as enslaved during the first quarter of the nineteenth century, assumed important offices in the local government, supporting the interests of the Greek community.
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