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  1. Statu quo ante bellum es un término latino que significa "el estado en que las cosas estaban antes de la guerra". [1] Es un principio usado en tratados internacionales para referirse a la retirada de las tropas de los campos de batalla y al retorno a las condiciones previas a la guerra.

    • Statu quo

      En historia, el término statu quo ante bellum se refiere al...

  2. The term status quo ante bellum is a Latin phrase meaning "the situation as it existed before the war". The term was originally used in treaties to refer to the withdrawal of enemy troops and the restoration of prewar leadership. When used as such, it means that no side gains or loses any territorial, economic, or political rights.

  3. Status quo ante bellum, peace signed for 5 years, extended for another 5 years in 1161. Belligerents. Byzantine Empire. Kingdom of Hungary. Grand Principality of Serbia (1149–1150, 1154) Banate of Bosnia (1154) Cumans and/or Pechenegs. Commanders and leaders.

    • 1149–1155
    • Status quo ante bellum, peace signed for 5 years, extended for another 5 years in 1161
    • Southern Hungary, Balkans
  4. Statu quo ante bellum es un término latino que significa "el estado en que las cosas estaban antes de la guerra". Es un principio usado en tratados internacionales para referirse a la retirada de las tropas de los campos de batalla y al retorno a las condiciones previas a la guerra.

  5. The treaty restored relations between the two parties to status quo ante bellum by restoring the pre-war borders of June 1812. [a] [1] Both sides were eager to end the war. It ended when the treaty arrived in Washington and was immediately ratified unanimously by the United States Senate and exchanged with British officials the next day.

  6. The earliest known use of the phrase status quo ante bellum is in the late 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for status quo ante bellum is from 1791, in the writing of Edmund Burke, politician and author. status quo ante bellum is probably a borrowing from Latin.