Everything about The Treaty Of Chaumont totally explained
The
Treaty of Chaumont was a rejected cease-fire offered by the Allies of the
Sixth Coalition to
Napoleon Bonaparte in 1814.
Following discussions in late February 1814, representatives of
Austria,
Prussia,
Russia, and
Great Britain reconvened a meeting at
Chaumont on
1 March,
1814. The resulting Treaty of Chaumont was signed on
9 March,
1814, (although dated
1 March), by Tsar
Alexander I (with
Metternich), Emperor
Francis II, King
Frederick William III, and British Foreign Secretary
Viscount Castlereagh. The Treaty called for Napoleon to give up all conquests, thus reverting France back to her 1791 (Pre-
French Revolutionary Wars) borders, in exchange for a cease-fire. If Napoleon rejected the treaty, the Allies pledged to continue the war. The following day Napoleon rejected the treaty, ending his last chance of a negotiated settlement.
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