Fontainebleau Treaty
The term Fontainebleau Treaty refers to a series of treaties signed in Fontainebleau , France :
- In the Treaty of Fontainebleau , passed on April 30, 1611 , a Spanish-French double wedding between the Spanish Infanta Anna and Louis XIII. as well as between his sister Elisabeth and Anna's brother, who later became King Philip IV of Spain .
- On May 30, 1631 Maximilian I of Bavaria and the French Cardinal Richelieu signed a non-aggression pact in the Treaty of Fontainebleau .
- On August 23, 1679, Denmark-Norway and Sweden signed a peace treaty that ended the Scandinavian War . The treaty was repeated in the Peace of Lund at the request of Sweden .
- On October 24, 1745, Louis XV. of France and the Scottish-English pretender Charles Edward Stuart in the Treaty of Fontainebleau a military alliance.
- On November 3, 1762, the French King Louis XV signed. a secret agreement with the Spanish King Charles III. on the handover of the French colony of Louisiana to Spain.
- On October 10, 1807, through the Fontainebleau Convention in the Peace of Pressburg, France and Austria settled unanswered questions, in particular the ending of the continued occupation of parts of Austria by French troops. Braunau returned to the Austrian civil administration, as did Gorizia. Austria had to accept the Isonzo valley path as the border between the Napoleonic kingdom of Italy and Inner Austria.
- On October 27, 1807, Napoléon Bonaparte and Charles IV of Spain decided in the secret Treaty of Fontainebleau to conquer and divide Portugal.
- On April 11, 1814, Napoleon's exile to Elba was established in the Treaty of Fontainebleau .
- The Treaty of Paris of 1763 is sometimes referred to as the Treaty of Fontainebleau.