Armistice: Difference between revisions

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==Sources==
==Sources==
<references/>
{{Reflist|2}}




[[Category:Europe]]
[[Category:Europe]]
[[Category:European History]]
[[Category:European History]]
[[Category:World War I]]
[[Category:The Great War]]
[[Category:WWAC]]
[[Category:WWAC]]

Latest revision as of 14:08, 28 April 2024

An Armistice is a formal agreement for a cease-fire between warring belligerents and may, or may not, contain terms and conditions other than a cease-fire. Whilst it is regarded as legally binding it is not a treaty and is generally considered a precursor to a subsequent Peace Treaty.

Examples of Armistices are those signed on 11 November 1918 between the western Allies and the German Empire halting World War I in the west at 11 a.m. that day; and the the Armistice which ended warfare between Italy and Austria-Hungary during World War I [at this point in time Austria-Hungary had been victorious on all their other fronts]. It was signed on 3 November 1918 in the Villa Giusti, outside Padua.

The Armistice between Bolshevik Russia and the victorious Central Powers was signed on 15 December 1917.[1]


Sources

  1. Wheeler-Bennett, John W., Brest-Litovsk - The Forgotten Peace March 1918, Macmillan, London & New York, 1966, p.93.