Congress of Erfurt
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The Congress of Erfurt was the meeting between Emperor Napoleon I of France and Tsar Alexander I of Russia from 27 September to 14 October 1808 intended to reaffirm the alliance concluded the previous year with the Treaty of Tilsit which followed the end of the War of the Fourth Coalition. At Tilsit Napoleon had turned the impressionable Alexander into an avid admirer, but by the time of the Erfurt meeting anti-French sentiment at the Russian court was beginning to threaten the newly forged alliance. Napoleon and his foreign minister Jean-Baptiste Nompère de Champagny sought to strengthen the alliance once more in order to settle affairs in Spain and prepare for the expected war with Austria. Working at cross-purposes to Napoleon was Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord who had by this time come to the conclusion that Napoleon was leading France to destruction, and who secretly advised Alexander to resist Napoleon's demands.
At Erfurt Napoleon attempted to awe Alexander with the glories of the French Empire. The meeting became a great conference involving a dazzling array of kings, princes, dukes, barons and notables from all over Europe. Among the attendees was Talma and the entire Comedie Française, presenting sixteen French tragedies over the course of the Congress; Goethe, courted by Napoleon himself; and the twenty-year-old Arthur Schopenhauer arriving in Goethe's train and casting a cynical eye over the proceedings.
Out of the meetings came an agreement, the Erfurt Convention, in fourteen articles, calling upon Britain to cease its war against France, recognizing Russian rule over Finland, and stating that in case of war with Austria, Russia should aid France "to the best of its ability." The two emperors departed for their homelands on October 14. Six months later in April 1809 the expected war with Austria began, and Alexander barely lived up to his agreement, aiding France as little as possible. By 1810 both emperors were considering war with one another.
Whether or not Napoleon succeeded in delaying the decay of the alliance is impossible to tell, but Erfurt was the last meeting between the two leaders.
In 1812 Russia was no longer complying with Napoleon's Continental System of economic warfare against the United Kingdom and anti-French sentiment in the Russian court had reached a new height. Russian defence spending had increased and troops were deployed to the border in preparation for an invasion of Poland. Napoleon pre-empted this by attacking first and with greater force.
From the beginning at Tilsit few onlookers believed that Europe's two most powerful nations could peacefully exist side by side (the Grand Duchy of Warsaw, a French satellite state, neighboured Russia). Erfurt may have delayed the eventual outbreak of war, but it was unlikely that anything would have stopped the two giants coming into conflict eventually.
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