International Radiotelegraph Convention (1912)

The International Radiotelegraph Convention (1912) established an agreement to allow the exchange of radio telegraphs (with the intention to connect this new network to wired telegraph). International callsigns, replacing the three letter callsigns prevalent then. Major world powers were given single prefixes such as N/K/W (United States), A (Germany), F (France), B (Great Britain). British colonies were given the call signs starting with V.[1] The convention was signed at the International Radiotelegraph Conference in London on July 5, 1912.[2] Additional regulations were added in 1927 (effective 1929) in Washington, D.C..[3]

The following countries were party to the conventions:

Signatory19121927
Argentine RepublicYY
AustriaYY
Belgian CongoYY
BelgiumYY
BoliviaY
BrazilYY
British IndiaYY
BulgariaYY
CanadaYY
ChileYY
ChinaY
ChosenY
Commonwealth of AustraliaYY
Costa RicaY
CubaY
CuraçaoY
CyrenaicaY
CzechoslovakiaY
DenmarkYY
Dominican RepublicY
Dutch East IndiesYY
EgyptYY
ErythreaY
EstoniaY
FinlandY
FranceYY
French Equatorial Africa and other ColoniesYY
French Indo-ChinaYY
French West AfricaYY
GermanyYY
Great BritainYY
GreeceYY
GuatemalaY
HungaryYY
Irish Free StateY
Italian SomalilandY
ItalyYY
JapanYY
Japanese SakhalinYY
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and SlovenesY
MadagascarY
MexicoYY
MonacoY
Morocco (with the exception of the Spanish Zone)Y
New ZealandY
NicaraguaY
NorwayYY
ParaguayY
PersiaYY
PeruY
PolandY
PortugalYY
Portuguese East AfricaYY
Portuguese Possessions in AsiaYY
Portuguese West AfricaYY
Republic of ColombiaY
Republic of El SalvadorY
Republic of HaitiY
Republic of HondurasY
Republic of LiberiaY
Republic of PanamaY
Republic of San MarinoY
RoumaniaYY
RussiaY
SiamY
SpainYY
Spanish Colony of the Gulf of GuineaY
SurinamY
SwedenYY
SwitzerlandY
Syro-Libanese TerritoriesY
TaiwanY
Kwantung Leased Territory and South Sea Islands under Japanese MandateYY
NetherlandsYY
TripolitaniaY
TunisYY
TurkeyYY
Union of South AfricaYY
United StatesYY
UruguayYY
VenezuelaY


See also

References

  1. https://earlyradiohistory.us/1913call.htm
  2. "Radio Conferences". itu.int. International Telecommunication Union.
  3. http://search.itu.int/history/HistoryDigitalCollectionDocLibrary/5.20.61.en.100.pdf
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.