Demetrius Stefanovich Schilizzi was an Ottoman-born Greek banker in London and Paris, and later a steamshipowner in Constantinople. He was also Italian consul in Calcutta, and a composer of music.
Life
Demetrius was born in Constantinople to Zannis Stefanovich Schilizzi, one of the Schilizzi merchant and shipping family originally from Chios, and Eleni Vouro. The Schilizzi family was one of the trading dynasties that arose after the 1822 Chios massacre of the Greek War of Independence. Demetrius' uncle J. S. Schilizzi was in the Black Seagrain trade at Livorno, and founded a London branch in 1837. Demetrius Schilizzi began his banking career in Paris. In 1871 Demetrius Schilizzi was living in Surrey Gardens, Hyde Park, London, with J. S. Schilizzi. In 1873 the London firm Schilizzi & Co. was restructured, with J. S. Schilizzi retaining the name, and Demetrius and two other family members forming Schilizzi Brothers, in business at 25 Austin Friars. He was also a director of the Imperial Bank, joining its board in 1873 on the death of Pantaleone Constantine Ralli. On his death Schilizzi left a reported £600,000 in securities, largely to a brother and nephew. He was buried at the Şişli Greek Orthodox Cemetery.
Benefactor
The Greek Orthodox cathedral of St. Stephen in Rue Georges Bizet, Paris, designed by Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer and decorated by Charles Lameire and Ludwig Thiersch, and a home for the aged by the same architect in the Rue de Varize, were commissioned by Schlizzi, who did not live to see them completed. Schilizzi's brother Paul oversaw and possibly funded the completion of the work. Demetrius Schilizzi had earlier been on the Building Committee of St Sophia's Cathedral, London.
Musical works
Schilizzi's works include Hélène, polka-mazurka, published in Paris by E. Girod, 1858, and Fantaisie élégante pour la flûte, published by Legouix, 1861. The fifth fantasy in Jean Rémusat's Le Flûtiste romancier, published 1959, and the second number in Jules Demersseman's Six petites fantaisies faciles pour deux flûtes, Op. 28 bis, appear both to be using a melody from a romance composed by Schilizzi, titled Simplicité.