Originally published in 1967, this book discusses the attempt in ancient and modern times to exploit one of the great mineral areas of Europe. The extraordinary Roman workings at Tharsis in south-west Spain were reopened in Queen Victoria’s reign, with the copper and sulphur they contained being much sought after. The mines at Tharsis played an important part in the formation of the United Alkali Company and in the discovery of the revolutionary MacArthur-Forrest gold extraction process, so critical for South Africa. At the time of its publication, no comparable study of a major mining enterprise existed. The author successfully synthesised the scientific and technical factors with the economic, social and political ones. The continuous struggle for both mining efficiency and markets is discussed, as are the difficulties caused by the Great Depression and the Spanish Civil War. The book will appeal to historians, students of business history and marketing, applied science and technology as well as those interested in the problems of foreign enterprise in what was (at the time) a relatively undeveloped country.
Originally published in 1967, this book discusses the attempt in ancient and modern times to exploit one of the great mineral areas of Europe. The mines at Tharsis played an important part in the formation of the United Alkali Company. At the time of its publication, no comparable study of a major mining enterprise existed.
1.The Story in Outline
2. The Problems Set by Nature Part 1:
Tartessians, Romans and Frenchmen
3. The Mystery of Tartessos
4. The Roman
Mining Colony
5. The Thousand Year Abandonment: The Cornish Cooper Monopoly
6. Ernest Deligny: The Rediscoverer Rejected
7. The French Company and its
Struggles, 1855-1880 Part 2: Prosperity Under Victoria and Edward
8. Sulphur
and the New European Chemical Complex
9. Sir Charles Tennant, the High
Victorian Entrepreneur
10. The British Company, 1866-1870: Formation and
Programme
11. The Great Rival: Rio Tinto, 1873
12. Tharsis and the World
Economy: Copper and Sulphur
14. Tharsis as an Enterprise, 1870-1900
15. Life
in the Mining Villages, 1866-1914
16. The Search for New Mines: The Turn
Inward, 1895-1914 Part 3: A Pyrites Mine in an Unsettled World
17. Production
and the Fight for Markets, 1914-1936
18. Labour and Politics: Dictatorship
and the Second World Republic
19. Civil War
20. The Years of Frustration,
1939-1963
21. Revolution in the Sulphur Market: The Prospects for Pyrites
22.
Mining Within the Spanish National Economy
23. The End of an Era: The Fourth
Reorganization
24. Three Themes.