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Significations et usages de ambassador

Définition

ambassador (n.)

1.an informal representative"an ambassador of good will"

2.(politics)a woman ambassador

3.(politics)a diplomat of the highest rank; accredited as representative from one country to another

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Définition (complément)

⇨ voir la définition de Wikipedia

Synonymes

ambassador (n.) (politics)

ambassadress, embassador, emissary  (politics), envoy  (politics)

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Voir aussi

ambassador (n.)

ambassadorial

Locutions

Airspeed AS 57 Ambassador • Airspeed AS.57 Ambassador • Airspeed Ambassador • Ambassador (album) • Ambassador (musical) • Ambassador (train) • Ambassador 21 • Ambassador Apartments (Portland, Oregon) • Ambassador Bridge • Ambassador City Jomtien • Ambassador Extraordinary • Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary • Ambassador Hotel (disambiguation) • Ambassador Hotel San Francisco • Ambassador MK III Missile Boat • Ambassador Magma • Ambassador Morgenthau's Story • Ambassador Theater (Washington, DC) • Ambassador Theatre • Ambassador Theatre (Dublin) • Ambassador Theatre (New York) • Ambassador Theatre (St. Louis) • Ambassador Theatre Group • Ambassador automobile • Ambassador class starship • Ambassador of Conscience Award • Ambassador of Hindu Muslim unity • Ambassador of the Shadows • Ambassador to Britain • Ambassador-at-Large • Austin Ambassador • BT Ambassador • Bad Ambassador • Canadian Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates • Canadian Ambassador to the United States • Charles Scott (ambassador) • Cultural ambassador • David Gray (ambassador) • David Hale (ambassador) • Dionysius (ambassador) • Disney's Ambassador Hotel • European Union Ambassador • French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire • Frosted Ambassador • German Ambassador to the Court of St. James • Goodwill Ambassador • Guilford Dudley (ambassador) • Haïti Ambassador Airlines • Italian Ambassador to Romania • John Finch (ambassador) • John Holmes (ambassador) • John Leigh (ambassador) • John McCarthy (ambassador) • John O'Leary (ambassador) • John Ordway (ambassador) • MV Cunard Ambassador • Mohamed Latheef (ambassador) • Nash Ambassador • Operation Ambassador • Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (ambassador) • Pakistan Ambassador to the United States • People to People Student Ambassador Program • Peter Wyche (ambassador) • Quincy House (U.S. Ambassador residence) • Ralph Earle (ambassador) • Robert Finn (ambassador) • Ross Wilson (ambassador) • Russian ambassador to Finland • South Africa Ambassador to United States • The Ambassador (TV series) • The Ambassador (comic strip) • The Ambassador (disambiguation) • The Ambassador (film) • The Ambassador Hotel • The Ambassador of Fun • U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain • U.S. Ambassador to Singapore • UNDP Goodwill Ambassador • UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador • United States Ambassador to Afghanistan • United States Ambassador to Algeria • United States Ambassador to Angola • United States Ambassador to Antigua and Barbuda • United States Ambassador to Argentina • United States Ambassador to Armenia • United States Ambassador to Australia • United States Ambassador to Azerbaijan • United States Ambassador to Bahrain • United States Ambassador to Barbados • United States Ambassador to Belgium • United States Ambassador to Belize • United States Ambassador to Benin • United States Ambassador to Bolivia • United States Ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina • United States Ambassador to Botswana • United States Ambassador to Brazil • United States Ambassador to Bulgaria • United States Ambassador to Burma • United States Ambassador to Burundi • United States Ambassador to Canada • United States Ambassador to Cape Verde • United States Ambassador to Chad • United States Ambassador to Chile • United States Ambassador to China • United States Ambassador to Colombia • United States Ambassador to Costa Rica • United States Ambassador to Cuba • United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia • United States Ambassador to Denmark • United States Ambassador to Djibouti • United States Ambassador to Dominica • United States Ambassador to East Germany • United States Ambassador to Ecuador • United States Ambassador to Egypt • United States Ambassador to El Salvador • United States Ambassador to Equatorial Guinea • United States Ambassador to Ethiopia • United States Ambassador to France • United States Ambassador to Gabon • United States Ambassador to Germany • United States Ambassador to Ghana • United States Ambassador to Great Britain • United States Ambassador to Greece • United States Ambassador to Grenada • United States Ambassador to Guatemala • United States Ambassador to Guyana • United States Ambassador to Haiti • United States Ambassador to Honduras • United States Ambassador to Iceland • United States Ambassador to India • United States Ambassador to Iran • United States Ambassador to Iraq • United States Ambassador to Ireland • United States Ambassador to Israel • United States Ambassador to Italy • United States Ambassador to Japan • United States Ambassador to Kenya • United States Ambassador to Korea • United States Ambassador to Kuwait • United States Ambassador to Lebanon • United States Ambassador to Lesotho • United States Ambassador to Luxembourg • United States Ambassador to Malawi • United States Ambassador to Mexico • United States Ambassador to Morocco • United States Ambassador to Mozambique • United States Ambassador to Namibia • United States Ambassador to New Zealand • United States Ambassador to Nicaragua • United States Ambassador to Nigeria • United States Ambassador to North Yemen • United States Ambassador to Norway • United States Ambassador to Pakistan • United States Ambassador to Panama • United States Ambassador to Paraguay • United States Ambassador to Peru • United States Ambassador to Romania • United States Ambassador to Rwanda • United States Ambassador to Saint Kitts and Nevis • United States Ambassador to Saint Lucia • United States Ambassador to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines • United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia • United States Ambassador to Singapore • United States Ambassador to Slovakia • United States Ambassador to Somalia • United States Ambassador to South Africa • United States Ambassador to South Vietnam • United States Ambassador to South Yemen • United States Ambassador to Spain • United States Ambassador to Suriname • United States Ambassador to Swaziland • United States Ambassador to Sweden • United States Ambassador to Syria • United States Ambassador to Tajikistan • United States Ambassador to Tanzania • United States Ambassador to Texas • United States Ambassador to Togo • United States Ambassador to Turkey • United States Ambassador to Uruguay • United States Ambassador to Uzbekistan • United States Ambassador to Venezuela • United States Ambassador to Vietnam • United States Ambassador to Yemen • United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia • United States Ambassador to Zambia • United States Ambassador to Zimbabwe • United States Ambassador to the Czech Republic • United States Ambassador to the Democratic Republic of the Congo • United States Ambassador to the European Union • United States Ambassador to the Holy See • United States Ambassador to the Netherlands • United States Ambassador to the Organization of American States • United States Ambassador to the Republic of the Congo • United States Ambassador to the United Nations • Weston Adams (ambassador) • William Clark, Jr. (ambassador) • William Dawson (ambassador) • William Dodd (ambassador) • William Short (American ambassador)

Dictionnaire analogique

Wikipedia

Ambassador

                   
  Hans Holbein the Younger: The Ambassadors, 1533. The life-sized panel portrays Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve, the ambassadors of Francis I of France.

An ambassador is the highest ranking diplomat who represents a nation and is usually accredited to a foreign sovereign or government, or to an international organization.

Sometimes countries also appoint highly respected individuals as Ambassador at Large who are assigned specific responsibilities, and they work to advise and assist their governments in a given area. The word is also often used more liberally for persons who are known, without national appointment, to represent certain professions, activities and fields of endeavor.

In everyday usage it usually applies to the ranking government representative stationed in a foreign capital. The host country typically allows the ambassador control of specific territory called an embassy, whose territory, staff, and even vehicles are generally afforded diplomatic immunity in the host country.

The senior diplomatic officers among members of the Commonwealth of Nations are known as High Commissioners, who are the heads of High Commissions. Representatives of the Holy See are known as Papal or Apostolic Nuncios, while the head of a Libyan mission prior to the 17 February Revolution was a "Secretary of the Libyan People's Bureau".[1]

Contents

  Rise of modern diplomacy

  "Arrival of the English Ambassadors" by Vittore Carpaccio, painted between 1495 and 1500—though ostensibly part of a series of paintings on the life of Saint Ursula, this actually depicts the developing diplomatic practices of the Republic of Venice in the painter's own time
  Before taking office an Ambassador's credentials must be accepted. Harry Schwarz handing his credentials to President George H. W. Bush in 1991

The rise of the modern diplomatic system was a product of the Italian Renaissance ( from around 1300 AD ). The use of ambassadors became a political strategy in Italy during the 17th century. The political changes in Italy altered the role of ambassadors in diplomatic affairs. Because many of the states in Italy are small in size, they were particularly vulnerable to larger states. The ambassador system was used to disperse information and to protect the more vulnerable states.

This practice then spread to Europe during the Italian Wars. The use and creation of ambassadors during the 15th century in Italy has had long-term effects on Europe and, in turn, the world's diplomatic and political progression. Europe still uses the same terms of ambassador rights as they had established in the 16th century, concerning the rights of the ambassadors in host countries as well as the proper diplomatic procedures. An ambassador was used as a representative of the state in which he is from to negotiate and disseminate information in order to keep peace and establish relationships with other states. This attempt was employed in the effort to maintain peaceful relations with nations and make alliances during difficult times.

The use of ambassadors today is widespread. States and non-state actors use diplomatic representatives to deal with a host of problems that occur within the international system. Ambassadors now normally live overseas or within the country in which it is assigned to for long periods of time so that they are acquainted with the culture and local people. This way they are more politically effective and trusted, enabling them to accomplish goals that their host country desires.

Resident Coordinators of UN system are accredited to the Head of State and have the same rank.

Historically, officials representing their countries abroad were termed ministers, but this term was also applied to diplomats of the second rank. The Congress of Vienna of 1815 formalized the system of diplomatic rank under international law:

Ambassadors are diplomats of the highest rank, formally representing the head of state, with plenipotentiary powers (i.e. full authority to represent the government). In modern usage, most ambassadors on foreign postings as head of mission carry the full title of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. "Ordinary" ambassadors and non-plenipotentiary status are rarely used, although they may be encountered in certain circumstances. The only difference between an extraordinary ambassador and an ordinary ambassador is that while the former's mission is permanent, the latter serves only for a specific purpose.[2]

  Ambassador-at-Large

Ambassador-at-large is a diplomat of the highest rank and/or a minister who is accredited to represent his country. But unlike the resident ambassador (who is usually limited to a country) and/or embassy, the ambassador-at-large is entrusted to operate in several usually neighbouring countries, a region or sometimes a seat of international organizations such as the United Nations/European Union. In some cases, an ambassador-at-large may even be specifically assigned a role to advise and assist the state or Government in particular issues. Historically, presidents or prime ministers have designated special diplomatic envoys for specific assignments, primarily overseas but sometimes also within the country as ambassadors-at-large.

  Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary

Among European powers, the ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary (French ambassadeur extraordinaire et plénipotentiaire or German außerordentlicher und bevollmächtigter Botschafter) was historically deemed the personal representative of the Sovereign, and the custom of dispatching ambassadors to the head of state rather than the government has persisted. For example, ambassadors to and from the United Kingdom are accredited to or from the Royal Court of St. James's (referring to St. James's Palace).

Because members of the Commonwealth of Nations have or had a common head of state, they do not exchange ambassadors, but instead have High Commissioners, who represent the government, rather than the head of state. In diplomatic usage, high commissioner is considered an equivalent rank and role to an ambassador.

While the title generally reflects the ambassador's second head position as head of a diplomatic mission, in some countries the term may also represent a rank held by career diplomats, as a matter of internal promotion, regardless of the posting, and in many national careers it is quite common for them to be appointed to other functions, especially within the ministry/ministries in charge of foreign affairs, in some countries in systematic alternation with actual postings.

The formal form of address for an ambassador is generally the form that would be used to address a head of state: "(Your/His/Her) Excellency" followed by name and/or the country represented. In many countries, less formal variations are frequently used, such as "Ambassador" followed by name, or the name followed by "Ambassador of...". In the United States, "Mr. Ambassador" may be used.

In some countries, a former ambassador may continue to be styled and addressed as ambassador throughout their life (in the United States, "Mr. Ambassador" or "Madam Ambassador" may be heard). In other countries, ambassador is a title that accrues to its holder only with respect to a specific position, and may not be used after leaving or beyond the position. Some countries do not use the term while an ambassador is in the home country, as the office holder is not an ambassador there; for example, a Canadian ambassador while in Canada is not generally addressed as ambassador, although he or she may be referred to as "Canadian ambassador to ..."; that is, with reference to a specific job function; the person is addressed or styled as ambassador only while holding such office.

Ranking below full ambassador are the rank of Envoy, Minister Resident and Chargé d'affaires. They represent their government rather than their head of state. For further details, see diplomatic rank.

  Non-diplomatic ambassadorships

In a less formal sense, the word is used for high-profile non-diplomatic representative of various entities (rarely states), mainly cultural and charitable organizations, often as willing figureheads to attract media attention, e.g. film and pop stars make appeals to the public at large for UNESCO activities (see UNESCO Goodwill Ambassadors), sometimes during press-swarmed visits in the field.

In French speaking regions such as France, Wallonia or Quebec, the title of ambassadeur person is used.

  See also

  References

  Bibliography

  External links

   
               

 

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