1957.
The European Union is comprised of what was formally the European Coal and Steel Community (founded 1951). In 1993, the Maastricht Treaty created the European Union as we know it today.
What was then called the European Economic Community was founded in 1957. It later became known as the European Community and then on the 1st of November 1993 it became known as the European Union.
The Schuman Declaration of 1950 although he didn't speak of a European Union.
The European Economic Community, which was founded in 1957 and is now known as the European Union.
Six countries founded the European Economic Community;- Luxembourg, Netherlands, Belgium, West Germany, France and Italy.
It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.It was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.
It is now called the European Union, but it was called the European Community and prior to that the European Economic Community.
Italy, The Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France and West Germany founded what was then called the European Economic Community in 1957. It is now known as the European Union and has 27 members.
European Community A+
In 1957 there was no European Union. Instead, it was called the European Economic Community (which later transformed into the European Union). It had six founding members: Italy, France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, and West Germany. The United Kingdom was offered to be a founding member, but refused. Denmark, Ireland, and the UK later joined in 1973, Greece was added in 1981, and Spain and Portugal both joined in 1986. West and East Germany later reunified in 1990, three years before the EEC would be engulfed by the EU.
What was then known as the European Economic Community, was founded in 1957 by France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg. It is now known as the European Union.