PARIS, TREATY OF

any of several important treaties, signed at or near Paris, France.

The Treaty of 1763

The Treaty of Paris of Feb. 10, 1763, was signed by Great Britain, France, and Spain. Together with the treaty of Hubertusburg, it terminated the Seven Years War. France lost its possessions on the North American continent by ceding Canada and all its territories east of the Mississippi to Great Britain, and by ceding W Louisiana to its ally, Spain, in compensation for Florida, which Spain yielded to Great Britain. France retained the islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon and recovered Guadeloupe and Martinique in the West Indies from Great Britain, in exchange for which it ceded Grenada and the Grenadines to the English.

In East India the French were permitted to return to their posts, but they were forbidden to maintain troops or build forts in Bengal; India thus virtually passed to Great Britain. In Africa France yielded Senegal to Great Britain. Cuba and the Philippines were restored to Spain. In Europe the French and Spanish returned Minorca to Great Britain, and France withdrew its troops from Germany. From this treaty dated the colonial and maritime supremacy of Great Britain.

The Treaty of 1783

By the Treaty of Paris of Sept. 3, 1783, Great Britain formally acknowledged the independence of the United States, and the warring European powers, Britain against France and Spain, with the Dutch as armed neutrals, effected a large-scale peace settlement. The preliminary Anglo-American articles (which went unchanged) were signed on Nov. 30, 1782, after months of tortuous negotiations, in which the chief American plenipotentiaries, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay, acquitted themselves so well that their achievement has been labeled "the greatest triumph in the history of American diplomacy."

France and Spain signed separate preliminary articles with Great Britain on Jan. 20, 1783, and the Dutch and British signed theirs on Sept. 2, 1783. These preliminary agreements (except the Anglo-Dutch one, which was not ratified by both powers until June, 1784) were signed as definitive treaties on Sept. 3, 1783.

The Anglo-American settlement fixed the boundaries of the United States. In the Northeast the line extended from the source of the St. Croix River due north to the highlands separating the rivers flowing to the Atlantic from those draining into the St. Lawrence River, thence with the highlands to lat. 45°N, and then along the 45th parallel to the St. Lawrence. From there the northern boundary followed a line midway through contiguous rivers and lakes (especially the Great Lakes) to the northwest corner of the Lake of the Woods, thence "due west" to the sources of the Mississippi (which were not then known).

The Mississippi, south to lat. 31°N, was made the western boundary. On the south the line followed the 31st parallel E to the Chattahoochee River and its junction with the Flint River, then took a straight line to the mouth of the St. Marys River, and from there to the Atlantic. The navigation of the Mississippi was to be open to the citizens of both nations.

Another section of the treaty granted Americans fishing rights off Newfoundland and the privilege of curing fish in the uninhabited parts of Labrador, Nova Scotia, and the Magdalen Islands, but not in Newfoundland. A third part provided that creditors of either side would be unimpeded in the collection of lawful debts. In a fourth section the American government promised to recommend to the several states that they repeal their confiscation laws, provide for restitution of confiscated property to British subjects, and take no further proceedings against the Loyalists.

In the treaty with France, Britain relinquished the restrictions that had been imposed on the French naval port of Dunkirk, but aside from minor adjustments in the West Indies and Africa, the territorial dispositions made in the Treaty of Paris of 1763 were generally continued. Spain, however, in its treaty with Britain, reacquired the Floridas in America and the island of Minorca in the Mediterranean, while the British retained Gibraltar.

The Treaty of 1814

The Treaty of Paris of May 30, 1814, was concluded between France on the one hand and Great Britain, Russia, Austria, and Prussia on the other after the first abdication of Napoleon I. France was confined to its boundaries of 1792. No indemnity was exacted, and England returned all the French colonies save Tobago, St. Lucia, and Mauritius. Britain also kept Malta. A general conference was to be called for the territorial settlement in Europe (see Vienna, Congress of). The leniency of the treaty to defeated France was chiefly due to the diplomatic skill of Talleyrand, who had engineered the restoration of Louis XVIII on the French throne.

The Treaty of 1815

After Napoleon's return, his defeat at Waterloo, and his second abdication, a new peace treaty was signed at Paris on Nov. 20, 1815. This treaty was much sterner than the one of the previous year. France was reduced to the boundary of 1790, was required to pay 700 million francs in reparations, and was made to pay for the maintenance of an Allied army of occupation in NE France, which was to remain for a maximum of five years. All the provisions of the treaty of 1814 not expressly revoked were to remain binding, as was the Final Act of the Congress of Vienna. On the same day Great Britain, Russia, Austria, and Prussia renewed the Quadruple Alliance.

Other Treaties

For the Treaty of Paris of 1856, see Paris, Congress of. For the Treaty of Paris of 1898, see Spanish-American War. After World War I several treaties were signed in 1919 and 1920 in or near Paris (see Versailles, Treaty of; Saint-Germain, Treaty of; Neuilly, Treaty of; Trianon, Treaty of; Sèvres, Treaty of). Again, after World War II, peace treaties were signed in Paris in 1947 between the Allies and Italy, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Finland. Each treaty is a separate document.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Paris Treaty Of  - 8837 results

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...between the return of King Constantine and the proposed revision of the Treaty of Sevres? How do you explain that Venizelos was summoned to Paris to discuss the Sevres treaty? ANSWER: They could not keep Venizelos away. You cannot keep that man...
...Multilateral Anti-War Treaty. See Paris Peace Pact Multilateral treaties, effect of amendment...Congress and treaties in, 309 Panama canal, 23 ; treaties for rejected...142 Paraguay, treaty making in, 309 Paris, treaty of, 119...
...discussion, and for modifying the treaty by arrangement with the signatory...were a breach of the Treaty of Paris. Article XXII of that treaty...increased since the Treaty of Paris, for the two Principalities...was no breach of the Treaty of Paris, which had secured to the Principalities...
...Consequently, news of the terms of the Treaty of Paris left the Natives thunderstruck...refused to believe the terms of the Paris Treaty as read to them at a council...the territory ceded to them by the Paris Treaty (italics in the original...
...September 26, 1928. League of Nations Treaty Series , XCIII: 343; also, in MANLEY...545. Cited as Optional Clause. Pact of Paris Treaty for the Renunciation of War . Signed at Paris, August 2, 1928. League of Nations Treaty...
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journal articles on: Paris Treaty Of  - 2027 results

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...Ratification and Final Page of the Treaty of Paris, 1783. by Lee Ann Potter The...an earlier agreement (the Treaty of Paris of 1763) had secured territory...thereof" --Article I of the Treaty of Paris, 1783 Rough Journal of the Continental...
...Four-Peacemaking in Paris in 1919: Alan Sharp...Statesmen Responsible for the Treaty of Versailles. by Alan...discussion about the Paris Peace Conference after...the major statesmen in Paris? * Why did the Treaty of Versailles not prove...
...Substantive Patent Law Treaty. by Jerome H. Reichman...Substantive Patent Law Treaty (SPLT) is premature...the 1967 text of the Paris Convention for the Protection...Agreement. (12.) Paris Convention for the Protection...Substantive Patent Law Treaty (SPLT): International...
...Really Miss the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty? by Oliver Thranert The nuclear nonproliferation treaty (NPT) has been described by one of its...international community about enforcement of the treaty; an increasingly bitter struggle between...
...TRIPS), (59) the WIPO Copyright Treaty, and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (together, WIPO Internet Treaties). (60) To meet this test, an exception...misperception that the Senate ratifies treaties. Rather, the Senate consents to the treaty, as amended, and ratification awaits...
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...dictated the design of the CFE Treaty no longer exists. As a result...limits that were key to the treaty in 1990 seem "out of joint...anachronistic feature of the treaty is the fact that the basic limits...limits. So is France, but Paris seems motivated more by ideological...
...and its product, the Constitutional Treaty, must share some of the blame. The...Convention the task of simplifying the treaties, partly to make them easier for the...governments making difficult changes. The Treaty is the fifth attempt to reshape the...Single European Act, the Maastricht treaty, and the Treaties of Amsterdam and Nice. It is time to...
...regional and multi-national treaties and conventions related to...the Categories terms is "Treaties." The OAS Secretariat for...features a variety of treaty databases, the main one being Inter-American Treaties http://www.oas.org...also known as the Pact of Paris or Kellogg-Briand Pact...
...limitations specified in the amended ABM treaty is being violated. Article IV of the...compliance with the provisions of the Treaty." In our approach we have been guided...learned from joint fulfillment of these treaties. In developing specific monitoring measures...should produce. As we know, the ABM treaty now limits the number of deployed ABM...
...surprise attacks by either bloc, the treaty limited how many forces could be stationed...cornerstone" of European security, the CFE Treaty is typically hailed for leading to the...the accord "one of the most important treaties of the 20th century." But with the...negotiated an adapted version of the treaty, which among other things replaces the...
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Treaty of Paris has free dollop of U.S. history; Appeals...is a great time to visit the Treaty of Paris Restaurant in the basement of Annapolis...ending the Revolutionary War was signed in Paris in 1783, and it was ratified in the Annapolis...
...Behave with Effortless Superiority at the Treaty Signing. Byline: Quentin Letts PRESIDENT...House for yesterdays British-French treaty signing. Almost seemed to think he owned...minutiae or even the broad thrust of the treaty the two men signed. But it was certainly...
Paris has no francs for NATO expansion: Clinton: U.S. will pay up to $2...most of the costs themselves." Members of the 16-nation North Atlantic Treaty Organization struggled unsuccessfully to implement a previous NATO mandate...
Paris, London tell U.S. corps no threat to NATO by Andrew Borowiec PARIS - France and Britain are joining forces to convince the United States that a planned European "intervention corps" will not affect NATOs cohesion. "Our alliance is...
Sugar Treaty. Byline: Gemma Cruz Araneta...Filipino about the "Treaty of Paris" and chances are he/she...ratification of "Treaty of Paris" by the Senate of the USA...enough votes to ratify the Treaty of Paris. Pres. W. McKinley...
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encyclopedia articles on: Paris Treaty Of  - 182 results

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PARIS, TREATY OF any of several important treaties, signed at or near Paris, France. The Treaty of 1763 The Treaty of Paris of Feb...renewed the Quadruple Alliance . Other Treaties For the Treaty of Paris of 1856, see Paris, Congress of...
VERSAILLES, TREATY OF any of several treaties signed in the palace...Versailles, France. For the Treaty of Versailles of 1783...American Revolution , see Paris, Treaty of , 1783...among the five peace treaties that terminated World...on the other, the Treaty of Versailles embodied...negotiations of the Paris Peace Conference of...
SAINT-GERMAIN, TREATY OF saN-zhermaN , any of several treaties signed at Saint-Germain-en-Laye, near Paris, France. 1 The Treaty of Saint-Germain of 1570 terminated...Religion, Wars of ). 2 The Treaty of Saint-Germain of 1679 made...
WARSAW TREATY ORGANIZATION or Warsaw Pact...set up under a mutual defense treaty signed in Warsaw, Poland...equivalent of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Initiated as...remilitarization of West Germany under the Paris Pacts of 1954, the treaty...
JAYS TREATY concluded in 1794 between the United States...arising mainly out of violations of the Treaty of Paris of 1783 and to regulate commerce and navigation...extraordinary for the negotiation of a treaty. The principal American objects were...
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