Treaty of Vienna
Encyclopedia
There were several treaties of Vienna:
- Treaty of Vienna (1606)Treaty of Vienna (1606)The Treaty of Vienna was signed on June 23, 1606 between Stephen Bocskay, a Hungarian noble, and Archduke Matthias. Based on the terms of the treaty, all constitutional and religious rights and privileges were granted to the Hungarians in both Transylvania and Royal Hungary...
(HRE/Hungary - freedom of religion) - Treaty of Vienna (1656)Treaty of Vienna (1656)The treaty of Vienna, concluded on 1 December 1656, was an Austro–Polish alliance during the Second Northern War. Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III agreed to enter the war on the anti-Swedish side and support the Polish king John II Casimir with 4,000 troops...
Austro-Polish alliance in the Second Northern War, ineffective - Treaty of Vienna (1657)Treaty of Vienna (1657)The Treaty of Vienna, concluded on 27 May 1657, was an Austro–Polish alliance during the Second Northern War. After Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III had agreed to enter the war on the anti-Swedish side and support the Polish king John II Casimir with 4,000 troops in the ineffective Treaty of...
Austro-Polish alliance in the Second Northern War, effective - Treaty of Vienna (1725)Treaty of Vienna (1725)The Treaty of Vienna was signed on April 30, 1725 between Emperor Charles VI of Austria and King Philip V of Spain.The treaty guaranteed the Pragmatic Sanction of the Habsburgs, which was first declared in 1713. Based on the terms of the treaty, the Austrian Empire relinquished all claims to the...
Austria/Spain - Treaty of Vienna (1731)Treaty of Vienna (1731)The Treaty of Vienna was first signed on 16 March 1731 by Count Finzendorf and the Earl of Chesterfield. This treaty marked the collapse of the Anglo-French Alliance , the beginning of the Anglo-Austrian Alliance and the birth of the legend of the natural enmity between the Kingdom of France and...
Britain/Austria - alliance - Treaty of Vienna (1738)Treaty of Vienna (1738)The Treaty of Vienna or Peace of Vienna was signed on November 18, 1738. It ended the War of the Polish Succession. By the terms of the treaty, Stanisław Leszczyński renounced his claim on the Polish throne and recognized Augustus III, Duke of Saxony. As compensation he received instead the...
(or The Peace of Vienna) Multiple parties - resolved war of Polish succession - Treaty of Vienna (1809)Treaty of SchönbrunnThe Treaty of Schönbrunn , sometimes known as the Treaty of Vienna, was signed between France and Austria at the Schönbrunn Palace of Vienna on 14 October 1809. This treaty ended the Fifth Coalition during the Napoleonic Wars...
(also known as the Treaty of Schönbrunn) France/Austria - following Austria's defeat during the Napoleonic Wars - Treaty of Vienna (1815) can refer to several different treaties notably
- Treaty of Vienna of 25 March 1815, (also known as "Treaty of General Alliance") when Austria, Britain, Prussia and Russia agreed to put 150,000 men in the field against Napoleon Bonaparte.(see wikisource:Declaration at the Congress of Vienna).
- Treaty of Vienna of 9 June 1815, (also known as the "Final Act of the Congress of Vienna"), embodying all the separate treaties agreed at the Congress by the European powers.
- Treaty of Vienna (1864)Treaty of Vienna (1864)The Treaty of Vienna was a peace treaty signed on October 30, 1864 in Vienna between the Austrian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia, and the Kingdom of Denmark. The treaty ended the Second War of Schleswig. Based on the terms of the treaty, Prussia would administer Schleswig and Austria would...
Austria/Prussia/Denmark - concluded the Second War of Schleswig - Treaty of Vienna (1866)Treaty of Vienna (1866)According to the Treaty of Vienna signed on 12 October 1866, the Austrian Empire ceded Venetia to the French Empire, which in turn would cede it to the Kingdom of Italy, «under the reservation of the "consent of the people duly consulted"»...
Austria/France/Italy - Treaty of Vienna (1955), re-established the state of Austria after the Second World War
See also
- Vienna AwardsVienna AwardsThe Vienna Awards are two arbitral awards by which arbiters of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy sought to enforce peacefully the claims of Hungary on territory it had lost in 1920 when it signed the Treaty of Trianon...
, two agreements before and during World War II that expanded the territory of Hungary - Vienna Convention (disambiguation)