Explore the documents that shaped the early Hague Peace Conference program.
This meticulously organized volume gathers primary texts, circulars, and memoranda from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, offering a behind‑the‑scenes view of international efforts to limit armaments, regulate warfare, and promote arbitration. The edition presents a range of perspectives, from royal messages to diplomatic notes, framed by the broader goal of peaceful coexistence under the rule of law.
The contents trace the arc from proposals for reducing armaments and preventing conflict to concrete rules of war and the development of international arbitration. Readers will encounter official statements, treaty outlines, and legal discussions that influenced the era’s diplomacy and the pursuit of lasting peace.
- Primary documents on arms limitation, the laws of war, and the use of good offices and arbitration
- Formal communications and official memos from governments and international actors
- Historical context for the push toward a permanent international court and peaceful dispute resolution
Ideal for researchers and history readers seeking a documentary view of international law, diplomacy, and peace efforts around the First Hague Conference.