Saar Treaty
Type | Bilateral treaty |
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Signed | 27 October 1956 |
Location | Luxembourg City, Luxembourg |
Original signatories | |
Ratifiers |
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The Saar Treaty, or Treaty of Luxembourg (German: Vertrag von Luxemburg, French: accords de Luxembourg) is an agreement between West Germany and France concerning the return of the Saar Protectorate to West Germany. The treaty was signed in Luxembourg on 27 October 1956, by foreign ministers Heinrich von Brentano of West Germany and Christian Pineau of France, following the Saar Statute referendum on 23 October 1955, which resulted in a majority vote against the Saar Statute.[1]
After the Landtag declared its accession to the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany),[2] the incorporation of the Saarland was finalised on 1 January 1957. Both involved parties agreed on an economic transition period through 1959, during which the Saarland remained under French control.
References
[edit]- ^ Title page of the Saar Treaty (27 October 1956) on CVCE website
- ^ Beitrittserklärung des Saarlandes nach dem Grundgesetz der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Amtsblatt des Saarlandes, 1956, p. 1645
External links
[edit]- Saar Treaty (in German)
- The Saar question on CVCE website (in English, French, and German)
- Aftermath of World War II in Germany
- History of the Saar Protectorate
- Aftermath of World War II in France
- Treaties concluded in 1956
- Treaties entered into force in 1957
- 1956 in Luxembourg
- France–Germany relations
- 1956 in France
- 1956 in West Germany
- Treaties involving territorial changes
- October 1956 events in Europe