Treaty of Paris (1657)

Foreign alliances of France
Frankish–Abbasid alliance777–800s
Franco-Mongol alliance1220–1316
Franco-Scottish alliance1295–1560
Franco-Polish alliance1524–1526
Franco-Hungarian alliance1528–1552
Franco-Ottoman alliance1536–1798
Franco-English alliance1657–1660
Franco-Indian alliance1603–1763
Franco-British alliance1716–1731
Franco-Spanish alliance1733–1792
Franco-Prussian alliance1741–1756
Franco-Austrian alliance1756–1792
Franco-Indian Alliances1700s
Franco-Vietnamese
alliance
1777–1820
Franco-American alliance1778–1794
Franco-Persian alliance1807–1809
Franco-Prussian alliance1812–1813
Franco-Austrian alliance1812–1813
Franco-Russian alliance1892–1917
Entente Cordiale1904–present
Franco-Polish alliance1921–1940
Franco-Italian alliance1935
Franco-Soviet alliance1936–1939
Treaty of Dunkirk1947–1997
Western Union1948–1954
North Atlantic Alliance1949–present
Western European Union1954–2011
European Defence Union1993–present
Regional relations

The Treaty of Paris signed in March 1657 allied the English Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell with King Louis XIV of France against King Philip IV of Spain, merging the Anglo-Spanish War (1654–1660) with the larger Franco-Spanish War (1635–1659). The treaty confirmed the growing rapprochement between France and the English Republican regime.

Until the mid-1650s, the French had been supporters of the Royalist exiles under Charles II, but the move towards an alliance with Cromwell led Charles to conclude the Treaty of Brussels with Spain in 1656.

Terms

The English agreed to join France in its war against Spain in Flanders. France would contribute an army of 20,000 men. England would contribute both 6,000 troops and its fleet in a campaign against the Flemish coastal fortresses of Gravelines, Dunkirk and Mardyck.

Gravelines would be ceded to France and Dunkirk and Mardyck to England. Dunkirk, in particular, was on the Commonwealth's mind mainly because of the privateers that were causing damage to the mercantile fleet. For Cromwell and the Commonwealth, the question of possession of Dunkirk thus passed from a diplomatic possibility in the region to urgent political necessity.[1]

References

Sources

  • Gardiner, Samuel Rawson (1901). History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1660. Longmans, Green. Retrieved 10 June 2019.