Prague treaty

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The Prague Treaty , partly also the Prague Peace Treaty , stands for:

  • Prague Treaty (1310) between King Henry VII and the Wettins on their rights in Thuringia
  • Prague Treaty (1356) , confirmation of the incorporation of the Silesian duchies into the crown of Bohemia and the sovereign rights of the dukes by Emperor Charles IV.
  • Prague Treaty (1531) , inheritance contract between Duke Johann von Opole and King Ferdinand and pledging of the Duchies of Opole and Ratibor to Margrave Georg the Pious of Brandenburg-Ansbach
  • Peace of Prague (1463) , ending of the Bavarian War
  • Prague Treaty (1546) between Emperor Ferdinand and Elector Moritz von Sachsen on the cession of the mining towns of Platten and Gottesgab to Bohemia
  • Prague Treaty (1549) between Emperor Ferdinand and Elector Moritz von Sachsen on mutual rights in the Bohemian part of the former Schwarzenberg rule
  • Prague Treaty (1599) between Emperor Rudolf II and Duke Friedrich I of Württemberg on the replacement of the Württemberg afterlehn from Austria
  • Prague Treaty (1617) , assignment of the Bohemian inheritance rights of Philip III. of Spain to Duke Ferdinand of Styria
  • Peace of Prague (1635) , peace agreement between the emperor and the imperial estates during the Thirty Years' War
  • Prague Treaty (1764) , border treaty between Bavaria and Bohemia
  • Peace of Prague (1866) , peace agreement between Prussia and Austria on the end of the German war
  • Prague Treaty (1973) between the Federal Republic of Germany and Czechoslovakia on the nullity of the Munich Agreement