International Committee of The Red Cross
International Committee of The Red Cross
International Committee of The Red Cross
On 9 February 1863 in Geneva, Henry Dunant founded the "Committee of the Five" (together with
four other leading figures from well-known Geneva families) as an investigatory commission of
the Geneva Society for Public Welfare.[7] Their aim was to examine the feasibility of Dunant's ideas
and to organize an international conference about their possible implementation. The members of
this committee, aside from Dunant himself, were Gustave Moynier, lawyer and chairman of the
Geneva Society for Public Welfare; physician Louis Appia, who had significant experience working
as a field surgeon; Appia's friend and colleague Théodore Maunoir, from the Geneva Hygiene and
Health Commission; and Guillaume-Henri Dufour, a Swiss Army general of great renown. Eight days
later, the five men decided to rename the committee to the "International Committee for Relief to the
Wounded". In October (26–29) 1863, the international conference organized by the committee was
held in Geneva to develop possible measures to improve medical services on the battle field. The
conference was attended by 36 individuals: eighteen official delegates from national governments,
six delegates from other non-governmental organizations, seven non-official foreign delegates, and
the five members of the International Committee. The states and kingdoms represented by official
delegates were Grand Duchy of Baden, Kingdom of Bavaria, Second French Empire, United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Kingdom of Hanover, Grand Duchy of Hesse, Kingdom of
Italy, Kingdom of the Netherlands, Austrian Empire, Kingdom of Prussia, Russian Empire, Kingdom
of Saxony, United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway, and Spanish Empire.[8] Among the proposals
written in the final resolutions of the conference, adopted on 29 October 1863, were:
Only one year later, the Swiss government invited the governments of all European countries, as
well as the United States, Brazil, and Mexico, to attend an official diplomatic conference. Sixteen
countries sent a total of twenty-six delegates to Geneva. On 22 August 1864, the conference
adopted the first Geneva Convention "for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded in
Armies in the Field". Representatives of 12 states and kingdoms signed the convention:[9]