Treaty of Baden (1714)


The Treaty of Baden was the treaty that ended formal hostilities between France and the Holy Roman Empire, which had been at war since the start of the War of the Spanish Succession. It was signed on 7 September 1714 in Baden, Switzerland, and complemented the Treaties of Utrecht and of Rastatt.
By the Treaty of Rastatt. Emperor Charles VI accepted the Utrecht treaty on behalf of the Habsburg Monarchy. In the Treaty of Baden, the terms of peace between France and the Holy Roman Empire, which had been formally incomplete, were agreed. Therefore, the last of the many conflicts within the War of the Spanish Succession was ended. The details of the Treaty of Baden and the peace conference are recalled by the town's banneret and eyewitness, Caspar Joseph Dorer, in his "Diarium".
The treaty was the first international agreement signed on Swiss territory. On the margins of the conference, the signatories also secretly agreed to a Catholic union to intervene in favour of the Catholic cantons defeated at nearby Villmergen two years previously, when the Peace of Aarau had ended Catholic hegemony within the Confederacy.

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