Data

Name: Border changes of Italy after World War II

Type: Event

Start: 1947 AD

End: 1954 AD

Parent: End of World War II in Europe

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Icon Border changes of Italy after World War II

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Border changes of Italy in the aftermath of World War II.

Chronology


Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

  • October 1947: Transfer to France of Briga and Tenda, and minor revisions of the Franco-Italian border.
  • February 1947: Trieste and the surrounding area were incorporated into a new independent state called the Free Territory of Trieste.
  • October 1954: On 5 October 1954, the London Memorandum was signed in the British capital by ministers of the United States, United Kingdom, Italy, and Yugoslavia. It gave the former Zone A with Trieste to Italy for ordinary civil administration, and Zone B, which had already had a communist government since 1947, to Yugoslavia. In addition, Yugoslavia was given several villages in the municipality of Muggia that had been part of Zone A: Plavje, Spodnje Škofije, Elerji, Hrvatini, Kolomban, Cerej, Premančan, and Barizoni.

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