Merger Treaty

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Merger Treaty
Type of treaty Merging the judicial, legislative and administrative bodies of the three European communities
Signed 8 April 1965
Effective 1 July 1967
Signatories 1965 EC members

The Merger Treaty or Brussels Treaty,[1] signed in Brussels on 8 April 1965 and in force since 1 July 1967, first gathered together the organizational structures of the then three European Communities (European Coal and Steel Community, European Economic Community and Euratom). This formal name was Treaty establishing a Single Council and a Single Commission of the European Communities.

It created the European Commission and the Council of the European Communities to be the governing bodies for all three institutions, and it also had them share a single budget. This treaty is regarded by some as the real beginning of the modern European Union. The term European Communities or EC also came into use from this time onward.

It was abrogated by the Amsterdam Treaty signed in 1997 which replaced it.

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]

[edit] External links

Timeline of the Treaties and EU Constitution

ca:Tractat de fusió de les Comunitats Europees

cs:Slučovací smlouva de:Vertrag zur Einsetzung eines gemeinsamen Rates und einer gemeinsamen Kommission der Europäischen Gemeinschaften el:Συνθήκη Συγχώνευσης es:Tratado de Bruselas fr:Traité de fusion it:Trattato di fusione lb:Traité iwwert d'Asetze vun engem Gemeinsame Conseil an enger gemeinsamer Commissioun vun den Europäesche Gemeinschaften hu:Egyesítő szerződés nl:Fusieverdrag ja:ブリュッセル条約 no:Brüssel-traktaten (1967) pl:Traktat fuzyjny ro:Tratatul de fuziune sk:Zmluvy o Európskych spoločenstvách zh:合并条约

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