On March 30, 1856, representatives of Great Britain, France, Sardinia, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Paris of 1856, ending the Crimean War. The treaty confirmed Russia's loss of power as a result of the war. It lost territory; the Black Sea region and some Russia islands were demilitarized; and Russia lost its influence over Romanian principalities and Christians in the Ottoman Empire under the terms of the treaty.
