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The Paris Peace Treaties ( French: Traités de Paris) were signed on 10 February 1947 following the end of World War II in 1945. The Paris Peace Conference lasted from 29 July until 15 October 1946. The victorious wartime Allied powers (principally the United Kingdom, Soviet Union, United States, and France) negotiated the details of peace ...
The Treaty of Paris between Italy and the Allied Powers was signed on 10 February 1947, formally ending hostilities between both parties. It came into general effect on 15 September 1947.
1941 * Paris Protocols, agreement between Nazi Germany and Vichy France in 1941. 1947 * Paris Peace Treaties, 1947, which ended World War II for most nations. 1952 * Paris Protocol (1952), status of NATO headquarters. 1954 * Paris Accords, the agreements reached at the end of the London and Paris Conferences in 1954 concerning the post-war ...
Italian former colonies would be decided in connection with the preparation of a peace treaty for Italy. Like most of the other former European Axis powers the Italian peace treaty was signed at the 1947 Paris Peace Conference.
At the end of World War II the former Italian territories in Istria and Dalmatia became part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia by the Paris Peace Treaty (1947), the only exception being the communes of Muggia and San Dorligo della Valle .
After World War II both West Germany and East Germany were obliged to pay war reparations to the Allied governments, according to the Potsdam Conference. Other Axis nations were obliged to pay war reparations according to the Paris Peace Treaties, 1947. Austria was not included in any of these treaties.
In the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty, the Soviet Union and Romania reaffirmed each other's borders, recognizing Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region as territory of the respective Soviet republics. [1]
^ Treaty of Peace with Italy, Signed in Paris, on 10 February 1947, Part I, Section I, Article 3, La frontiere entre l'Italie et la Yougoslavie.