London Pact
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Categories: Partition | 1915 in law | World War I treaties | Contemporary Italian history | Secret diplomatic agreements | Treaties of Italy | History of Croatia | 1915 in Italy
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London Pact (Italian Patto di Londra), or more correctly, the Treaty of London, 1915, was a secret pact between Italy and Triple Entente, signed in London on 26 April 1915 by the Kingdom of Italy, the United Kingdom, France and Russia. According to the pact, Italy was to leave the Triple Alliance and join Triple Entente, as already stated in a secret agreement signed in London, on 4-5 September 1914. Furthermore, Italy was to declare war against Germany and Austria-Hungary within a month — and in fact the declaration of war was published 23 May of the same year. In exchange, Italy was to obtain some territorial gains (see Italia irredenta) at the end of the war: Image:Tirol-Suedtirol-Trentino.png
Tyrol, partitioned in 1918, parts remaining Austrian called Nordtirol and Osttirol since
To the Kingdom of Serbia it was promised The Kingdom of Montenegro was assigned Also, but less precisely, Serbia was promised
The Italians insisted, and the Allies agreed, that the question of the Croatian coast between Zara and Istria should be settled after the war. They also insisted that Serbia should not be informed about the agreements. This, however, the Allies overruled by sending to the Government of Serbia an official Note, dated 4 August 1915, confirming the postwar territorial claims of Serbia and Montenegro. The pact was to be kept secret, but after the October Revolution, it was published by Russian journal Izsvestia, in November 1917. At the Paris Peace Conference, the Italians insisted that they would negotiate only with their wartime allies Serbia and Montenegro, not with defeated enemies included in delegation of the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. In particular they were incensed that three members of the delegation were former Austro-Hungarian deputies (Croats Ante Trumbić, Josip Smodlaka, and the Slovene Otokar Ribarž), and that one (the Slovene Ivan Žolger) had served as Minister in the wartime Austrian Cabinet. The pact was nullified with the Treaty of Versailles, because Woodrow Wilson, supporting Slavic claims and not recognizing the treaty, rejected Italian requests on Dalmatian territories. The Partition of the Tyrol was confirmed by the Treaty of St. Germain. See alsode:Londoner Vertrag (1915) hr:Londonski sporazum 1915. it:Patto di Londra he:ברית לונדון hu:Londoni egyezmény (1915) nl:Pact van Londen sl:Londonski sporazum (1915) sr:Лондонски уговор sv:Londonfördraget, 1915 |


