On January 1, 1958, the European Community (EC), the predecessor to the
European Union (EU) was created when the
Treaty of Rome officially went into effect. This represented the culmination of efforts, since the end of World War II, to closely tie the nations of Europe as a way of preventing future wars. The original members were France, West Germany, Belgium, Italy, The Netherlands, and Luxembourg, but the EC has since expanded to become the EU, encompassing most of Europe in the fifty years since its creation.

Learn more about the
early development of the EC from 1945 through 1959.