Treaty of Paris
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Many treaties have been negotiated and signed in Paris, including:
- Treaty of Paris (1229)—ended the Albigensian Crusade
- Treaty of Paris (1259)—between Henry III of England and Louis IX of France
- Treaty of Paris (1303)—between King Philip IV of France and King Edward I of England
- Treaty of Paris (1323)—Count Boner of Flanders relinquished Flemish claims over Zeeland
- Treaty of Paris (1355)—a land exchange between France and Savoy
- Treaty of Paris (1623)—between France, Savoy, and Venice against Spanish forces in Valtelline
- Treaty of Paris (1657)—established military alliance between France and England against Spain
- Treaty of Paris (1763)—ended the Seven Years' War
- Treaty of Paris (1783)—ended the American Revolutionary War
- Treaty of Paris (1810)—ended the war between France and Sweden
- Treaty of Paris (1814)—ended the war between France and the Sixth Coalition
- Treaty of Paris (1815)—followed the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo
- Treaty of Paris (1856)—ended the Crimean War
- Treaty of Paris (1898)—ended the Spanish-American War
- Treaty of Paris (1900)—ended all conflicting claims over Río Muni
- Paris Peace Conference, 1919—treaties with the defeated powers of the First World War
- Treaty of Paris (1920)—united Bessarabia and Romania
- Paris Peace Treaties, 1947—formally established peace between the World War II Allies and Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Romania, and Finland
- Treaty of Paris (1951)—established the European Coal and Steel Community; though now expired, it was one of the foundational treaties of the European Union
- Paris Peace Accords (1973)—ended American involvement in the Vietnam War