Delegate Gallery
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Choose from 37 pictures in our Delegate collection for your Wall Art or Photo Gift. All professionally made for Quick Shipping.

Group photo, Argentinian delegates, Miami, USA
Group photo, Argentinian delegates at Miami, Florida, USA, 11 May 1945, posing in front of an aeroplane. They were on their way to San Francisco to attend a United Nations conference to discuss world peace. They include, from left to right (front row): Dr Carlos Maria Bollini Shaw, Adolfo Scilingo, Senora de Miguel A Carcano, General Juan Carlos Bassi, Dr Adalberto Kreiger Vasena, Federico del Solar Dorrego; (second row): Commander Heriberto Ahrens, Mariano Irenea Seminario; (third row): Roberto Valentin Palmieri; (fourth row): Major Ignacio Avalos, Miguel Angel Carcano; (fifth row): Commander Santiago Juan Bialet, Samuel A Hartridge, Jose Maria Cosentino.
1945
© Mary Evans / Pharcide

The Queen replying to the members of the Colonial Conference
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The Ratification of the Treaty of Munster, 1648, by Gerard t
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London Peace Conference or the Conference of the Ambassadors
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London Peace Conference or the Conference of the Ambassadors
The Balkan (Turkish, Greek, Montenegran and Serbian) delegates at the peace conference in London. The London Conference of 19121913, also known as the London Peace Conference or the Conference of the Ambassadors, was an international summit of the six Great Powers of that time (Great Britain, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia and Italy) convened in December 1912 due to the successes of the Balkan League armies against the Ottoman Empire in the First Balkan War. In particular, the conference intended to arbitrate between the warring powers as to territorial acquisitions, and also to determine the future of Albania, whose independence was proclaimed during the conflict. The London Peace Conference was attended by those delegates from the Balkan allies (including Greece) who had not signed the previous armistice, as well as Ottoman Empire (depicted here). The treaty was signed on 30th May 1913, but further disputes led to the Second Balkan War breaking out on 16th June 1913. Date: circa 1912
© Mary Evans / Grenville Collins Postcard Collection

President Wilson and others, Paris Peace Conference
The American President Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924), seen here (front row, centre) at the Peace Conference in Paris following the end of the First World War. With him, from left to right, are Colonel E M House (diplomat and adviser), Robert Lansing (Secretary of State), Henry White (diplomat) and General Tasker Howard Bliss (US Army). Many others are standing behind them. Date: 1919
© Robert Hunt Library/Mary Evans