What was the Paris Peace Conference? The Paris Peace Conference (also the Versailles Peace Conference) was an international summit of world leaders, convened on 18 January 1919, by the victorious ...
What Was the Paris Peace Conference? When the Armistice was signed on the 11th of November 1918, it was agreed that a Peace Conference would be held in Paris to settle affairs following the war.
The Council of Four, which included (left to right) Great Britain Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Italian Premier Vittorio Orlando, French Premier Georges Clemenceau and US President Woodrow ...
On 18 January 1919, the Peace Conference opened in Paris, bringing together the victors of the First World War to prepare the peace treaties. From the very opening, new nations expressed their ...
On Jan. 18, 1919, a few months after the end of World War I, leaders from the Allied nations began a series of discussions that became known as the Paris Peace Conference to settle issues raised ...
Al-Monitor is an award-winning media outlet covering the Middle East, valued for its independence, diversity and analysis. It is read widely by US, international and Middle East decision makers at the ...
PARIS -- The Peace Conference convened for its first official session at 3:00 p.m. today. Delegates representing 26 nations met in the famous Clock Hall of the Quai d'Orsay. President Poincare ...
It is National Voters’ Day in India. On this day in 1950, the Election Commission of India (ECI) was established under Article 324 of the Indian Constitution. Meanwhile, on January 25, 1919, the Leagu ...
As leader of the French delegation to the Paris Peace Conference, he insisted on Germany's disarmament. Born into a strongly republican family in the Vendée region on France's west coast in 1841 ...
"Big Four" world leaders at World War I Peace Conference in Paris, May 27, 1919. From left to right: Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Premier Vittorio Orlando, Premier Georges Clemenceau ...
On the occasion of the “International Humanitarian Conference for Sudan and the Neighbouring Countries” We, the Ministers of Foreign Affairs and representatives of the States and international and ...