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The diplomats couldn't agree on where to sit. Russia's Count Orlov refused to si
1856 Event

March 30

Treaty of Paris: Crimean War Ends After Two Brutal Years

The diplomats couldn't agree on where to sit. Russia's Count Orlov refused to sign until the seating arrangement acknowledged his nation's dignity—despite the fact that Russia had just lost 500,000 men and the war itself. The Treaty of Paris ended the Crimean War on March 30, 1856, but its real victory wasn't territorial. It banned warships from the Black Sea and declared it neutral waters, a humiliation that gnawed at Russian pride for fifteen years until they simply ignored it. The Ottomans got a seat at the European table for the first time, admitted to the "Concert of Europe." But here's the thing: this war's greatest legacy wasn't diplomatic—it was Florence Nightingale's data visualizations proving that army hygiene killed more soldiers than combat ever did.

March 30, 1856

170 years ago

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