The Banque de Tunisie was created on by the
Banque Transatlantique which converted its existing Tunis office into a fully-fledged local bank, three years after the establishment of the
French protectorate of Tunisia. Its seat was a diminutive building at 3, rue Es-Sadikia (now rue Gamal Abdel Nasser), across the street from the
French protectorate residence, which has since been demolished. Its founders hoped to secure the exclusive right to issue banknotes in the protectorate from the French government, which however was eventually granted to the
Banque de l'Algérie in 1904. In 1911, the Banque de Tunisie participated alongside the Banque Transatlantique in the creation of the
Banque Commerciale du Maroc, headquartered in Paris and with main office in Casablanca. In 1941, it was acquired together with Banque Transatlantique by the
Crédit Industriel et Commercial (CIC), which took advantage of the
Vichy anti-Jewish legislation. In 1948, it absorbed the Tunis branch of the , and in 1951 led the liquidation of the Tunis-based , both of which had primarily served
Italian Tunisian customers. By the time of
Tunisian independence in 1956, the CIC agreed to cede most of its 70% equity stake in Banque de Tunisie to the country's government; at that time, most of the bank's staff were Jewish, as were about a third of its depositors. In 1963, the Banque de Tunisie took over the branches of
Société Générale in Tunis and Sfax, in exchange for a 17.5% stake. Other European and American banks subsequently acquired minority stakes in the Banque de Tunisie. In 1968, it acquired the former Tunisian operation of France's
Compagnie Algérienne. In 1977, Tunisian shareholders regained a majority in the bank's capital. By the late 2000s, Tunisian shareholders together owned around three-quarters of the bank's equity capital, and
Crédit Mutuel (which had taken over the CIC in 1998) owned 20%. At that time, the bank had the largest market capitalization of all listed Tunisian companies.
Belhassen Trabelsi, the brother of
Leïla Ben Ali, wife of President
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, was one of the bank's board members. In late 2012, Crédit Mutuel increased its stake to 33% by acquiring the shares formerly owned by the Trabelsi family. File:Tunisie Banque de Tunisie.JPG|Current headquarters complex on in
Tunis File:Immeubleecl.jpg|Main old downtown branch on File:Banquetn.JPG|Branch on , former Tunis office of the File:Banque de Tunisie.jpg|Former branch in
Sfax, erected in 1916 on a design by architect ==See also==