London treaty
The London Treaty or the Treaty of London means the following agreements:
- Treaty of London (1396) with France as a contracting party
- Treaty of London (1474) , provided for the military division of France between Edward IV of England and Charles the Bold
- Treaty of London (1518) , a non-aggression pact between the great European powers
- Treaty of London (1604) , ended the Anglo-Spanish War (1585-1604) as part of the Eighty Years' War
- London Treaty (1818) , in which Great Britain and the United States regulated the border west of the Rocky Mountains
- London Treaty 1824, see British-Dutch Treaty of 1824 , in which Great Britain and the Netherlands regulated their relations in Southeast Asia
- London Treaty 1827 , in which Great Britain, France and Russia sought an independent Greece
- Treaty of London 1840 , aimed at pacifying the Levant
- Dardanelles Treaty 1841, in which the passage through the Dardanelles was regulated
- London Treaty (1861) , in which Great Britain, France and Spain agreed to force the repayment of Mexico's foreign debts together
- Second London Treaty of 1867, recognition of Luxembourg's neutrality, see London Conference (1867)
- London Treaty (1884) , in which Great Britain initially recognized the independence of the Boer Republic of the Transvaal (South African Republic)
- Treaty of London (1890) , established the borders between the Portuguese colonies of Angola and Mozambique and the surrounding British territories
- London Declaration of the Law of the Sea of 1909
- London Treaty (1913) , ended the First Balkan War
- London Treaty (1915) , in which Italy committed itself to entering the First World War on the side of the Allies
- the second arms control agreement 1930, see Naval Conference #The London Conference of 1930
- London Guarantee Treaty 1959 , in which the respective representatives of the Greek and Turkish ethnic groups in Cyprus agreed on the three guarantee powers of Cyprus
See also: