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The Treaty of Potsdam (also known as the Potsdam Agreement) was a treaty signed during the War of the Third Coalition on 3 November 1805 between Alexander I of the Russian Empire and Frederick William III of Prussia.
Treaty between England and the Holy Roman Empire during the Italian War of 1521–1526 1522 Treaty of Windsor: Between Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, and Henry VIII of England; its main clause was the invasion of France. 1524 Treaty of Malmö: Ends the Swedish War of Liberation. Treaty of Tordesillas: Treaty between the Lord of Monaco and ...
Treaty of Paris (1810) Treaty of Paris (1814) Treaty of Paris (1815) Treaty of Paris (24 February 1812) Treaty of Paris (14 March 1812) Truce of Pläswitz; Treaty of Potsdam (1805) Treaty of Poznań; Peace of Pressburg (1805)
Treaty of Ganja; Treaty of Greifswald; Treaty of Hanover (1710) Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi; Treaty of Kyakhta (1727) Treaty of Kyakhta (1915) Treaty of London (1839) Treaty of London (1871) Treaty of Nystad; Treaty of Paris (1856) Treaty of Peterswaldau; Treaty of Portsmouth; Treaty of Potsdam (1805) Treaty of Resht; Treaty of Saint ...
The Potsdam Agreement (German: Potsdamer Abkommen) was the agreement among three of the Allies of World War II: the United Kingdom, the United States, and the Soviet Union after the war ended in Europe that was signed on 1 August 1945 and it was published the next day.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Treaty_of_Potsdam&oldid=46584220"This page was last edited on 2 April 2006, at 11:32
The initial Global Power Plant Database, an open source database of the power plants globally, was released in April 2018. [55] As of May 2021, the portal itself is still under development. Power Explorer is also supported by Google with various research partners, including KTH, Global Energy Observatory, Enipedia, and OPSD.
It was a pragmatic system based on the primacy of the strong – a "trusteeship of the powerful", as he then called it, or, as he put it later, "the Four Policemen". The concept was, as [Senator Arthur H.] Vandenberg noted in his diary in April 1944, "anything but a wild-eyed internationalist dream of a world state....