词条 | Peace of Basel |
释义 |
|name = Peace of Basel |long_name = |image = Peace of Basel.png |image_alt = Map shows Central Europe after the Peace of Basel. |image_width = 280px |caption = Map shows Central Europe after the Peace of Basel and the Treaty of Campo Formio. |context =
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|location_signed = Basel, Old Swiss Confederation |date_signed = 1795 |languages = }} The Peace of Basel of 1795 consists of three peace treaties involving France during the French Revolution (represented by François de Barthélemy).
DetailsWith great diplomatic cunning, the treaties enabled France to placate and divide its enemies of the First Coalition, one by one. Thereafter, Revolutionary France emerged as a major European power.[2] The first treaty, on 5 April 1795 between France and Prussia, had been under discussion since 1794. Prussia withdrew from the coalition that had been working on the impending partition of Poland and, where appropriate, withdrew its troops aligned against Austria and Russia. (See also the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.) In secret, Prussia recognized French control of the west bank of the Rhine, pending a cession by the Imperial Diet. France returned all of the lands east of the Rhine captured during the war. On the night of 6 April, the document was signed by the representatives of France and Prussia, François de Barthélemy and Karl August von Hardenberg. They were not face to face, each was in his own accommodation in Rosshof or the Markgräflerhof, and the papers were passed around by a courier. The contract that ceded the left bank of the Rhine was in a secret article, along with the promise that it would indemnify the right bank if the left bank of the Rhine should be covered in a final general peace in France. Peter Ochs drew up the Treaty and served as a mediator for a significant proportion of these financial statements. Prussia stuck to the agreement of the Treaty of Basel until 1806, when it joined the Fourth Coalition. In the second treaty, on 22 July, Spain ceded the eastern two-thirds of the island of Hispaniola to France in exchange for keeping Gipuzkoa. The French also came at night to sign the peace treaty between France and Spain in which Spain was represented by Domingo d'Yriarte, who signed the treaty in the mansion of Ochs, the Holsteinerhof. These treaties with Prussia and Spain had the effect of breaking the alliance between the French Republic's two main opponents of the First Coalition. On 28 August 1795, the third treaty was completed, a peace between France and the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel, signed by Friedrich Sigismund Waitz von Eschen. There was also an agreement to exchange the Austrian troops who had been captured in Belgium. See also
References1. ^Engels, Ernst August Richard. Friedrich Nicolais "Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek" und der Friede von Basel 1795. Published: Würzburg, Buchdruckerei R. Mayr, 1936 {{French Revolution navbox}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Peace Of Basel}}2. ^Francois Furet and Mona Ozouf, eds. A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution (1989) pp 151-54 15 : 1795 treaties|1795 in France|1795 in Spain|1795 in North America|Peace treaties of France|Peace treaties of Prussia|Peace treaties of Spain|Treaties of the French First Republic|Treaties of the Spanish Empire|Treaties of the Kingdom of Prussia|France–Spain relations|1795 in Prussia|Treaties of the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel|History of Haiti|Saint-Domingue |
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