Treaty of St. Germain with Austria (1919) Treaty of Neuilly with Bulgaria (1919) Treaty of Trianon with Hungary (1920) Treaty of Sevres with Turkey (1920) - later amended in the: Treaty of Lausanne with Turkey (1923)
The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to give up its influence in the Ottoman region, which included Armenia. The Treaty of Sevres was meant to specifically establish peace between the Ottomans and the Allies, but it was never signed.
All the Central Powers, who lost World War I, were punished by the Treaty of Versailles. All four countries (Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire) had separate treaties. Germany's was by far most severe. Germany's Treaty of Versailles was the most important. It listed that Germany must admit World War I was their fault and they must pay the Allied countries' governments for the damage they've caused. They also had to forfeit all land they acquired during the war as well as their colonies. They had to reduce their army to 100,000 men, cut back their navy, and eliminate their air force. This treaty was very harsh because the French and British wanted revenge on Germany, for this great war among other things.
The empire was partitioned in the treaty of Sevres (1920). France was to take the southeast of Turkey, Britain the southeastern corner by Iraq and Italy the south and southwest. Turkey fought a war of independence as expelled the foreign powers. Outside Turkey's, France established protectorates in Lebanon and Syria. Britain established protectorates in Iraq, Palestine and Jordan. Armenia was recognised as an independent state.
The Treaty Of Paris
The purpose of the Treaty of Sevres was to conclude a formal peace with Turkey (the Ottoman Empire) after the latter was defeated in World War 1. However, Turkey resumed fighting and another treaty was concluded in 1923 (Treaty of Lausanne).
Treaty of Versailles, Treaty of St. Germain (for the now independent Austria), Treaty of Neuilly (for Bulgaria), Treaty of Trianon (for the now independent Hungary), Treaty of Sevres (for Turkey), Treaty of Lausanne (replaced Sevres for Turkey later on), The Locarno Pact, Woodrow Wilson's Points, Armistice, Cease fire (11/11), Dawes plan.
Treaty of St. Germain with Austria (1919) Treaty of Neuilly with Bulgaria (1919) Treaty of Trianon with Hungary (1920) Treaty of Sevres with Turkey (1920) - later amended in the: Treaty of Lausanne with Turkey (1923)
The Treaty of Sevres - but in fact the Turks found the treaty so savage that they started fighting again, and a much more favourable settlement was agreed in the Treaty of Lausanne (1923).
The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to give up its influence in the Ottoman region, which included Armenia. The Treaty of Sevres was meant to specifically establish peace between the Ottomans and the Allies, but it was never signed.
There were several treaties- each of the defeated Central Powers countries came to a different treaty with the victorious Allied Powers. Austria had the Treaty of Saint-Germain, Hungary (which had been separated from Austria) had the Treaty of Trianon, Bulgaria had the Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine, and Turkey had the Treaty of Sevres. The most famous, however, is probably the Treaty of Versailles, which was the treaty with Germany.
There were five treaties, which together are often referred to as the Paris Peace Settlement. # Treaty of Versailles (with Germany) # Treaty of St Germain (with Austria) # Treaty of Trianon (with Hungary) # Treaty of Neuilly (with Bulgaria) # Treaty of Sevres (with Turkey) Note that Turkey resumed fighting and gained a much more favourable settlement in the Treaty of Lausanne (1923).
It wasn't time-limited, except by World War 1. It was superseded by the Treaties of Neuilly (1919) and Sevres (1920), of which the latter fared even worse, being in turn completely replaced by the Treaty of Lausanne (1923).
The Treaty of Versailles was the peace treaty with Germany. There were a number of other peace treaties with each of the other defeated members of the Central Powers - St. Germain with Austria, Trianon with Hungary, Sevres with Turkey and Neuilly with Bulgaria
The main treaties after WW1 include the Treaty of St. Germain, which dissolved Austria-Hungary and held votes to move certain conflicting populations. The Treaty of Trianon dealt with Hungary's borders. The Treaty of Sevres dealt with the Ottaman Empire's troubled borders. Finally, the Treaty of Neuilly dealt with Bulgaria's borders. Sources: Wikipedia and history course
The modern Greek State was at its largest between 1919-1923 when the Treaty of Sevres was in force but before the Turkish Independence War resulted in the Treaty of Lausanne. At this point Greece even controlled territory on the Anatolian mainland (but did not control Rhodes).You can see a map of Greek expansions and losses in this map.
The Treaty of Sèvres, signed in 1920, failed to last primarily due to widespread opposition from the Turkish nationalist movement led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who rejected the treaty's terms that imposed severe territorial losses on Turkey. Additionally, the treaty was never fully ratified, and the subsequent Greco-Turkish War further undermined its legitimacy. The eventual signing of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923, which recognized a new, sovereign Turkish state, replaced the Sèvres treaty and established a more favorable outcome for Turkey.