Treaty of Turin
Several intergovernmental agreements are referred to as the Treaty of Turin :
- 1381 comes through the mediation of Count Amadeus VI. of Savoy, a peace treaty between the Republic of Venice and the Republic of Genoa after the Chioggia War for supremacy in the Mediterranean.
- In 1696 , Savoy allied itself with France after it had left the Augsburg Alliance . France returns the conquered city of Pinerolo . The marriage of the daughter of Viktor Amadeus II , Maria Adelaide of Savoy , with the Dauphin of France, Louis de Bourbon is intended to consolidate this treaty.
- In 1754 , Savoy and Geneva set their common border in a treaty: the left bank of the Seymaz river falls to Savoy, the right bank remains at Geneva. The border divides the place Chêne (→ Chêne-Bourg and Chêne-Bougeries ).
- 1760 New definition of the border between Savoy and the Dauphiné . France gave up the cities of Seyssel (Haute-Savoie) , Chanaz and La Balme on the left bank of the Rhône , but got part of Bugey in exchange for Bellegarde-sur-Valserine .
- In 1816 the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont ceded the Savoyard communities (including Carouge ) to Switzerland and here to the canton of Geneva. The agreement of 1754 thus becomes obsolete.
- 1860 between Napoléon III. and King of Sardinia-Piedmont , Victor Emanuel II ,agreed to annex Savoy and the county of Nice to France.