Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The economic historian Guillermo Pérez Sarrión claims that the 1667 treaty demonstrated "England's absolute dominance of Anglo-Spanish trade". [21] One London merchant later described it as "the best flower in our garden". English goods were imported through Cadiz and sold locally or re-exported to the colonies. Spanish dye and wool went the ...
Treaty of Madrid (1630), in which England renounced supporting the rebels of the Spanish Netherlands and the Protestants in Germany; Treaty of Madrid (1667) or Lord Sandwich's Treaty, the first step in officially ending the Anglo-Spanish War (1654–1660) Treaty of Madrid (1670), in which Spain recognized English possessions in the Caribbean Sea
The Anglo-Spanish War was a conflict between the English Protectorate and Spain between 1654 and 1660. It was driven by the economic and religious rivalry between the two countries, with each side attacking the other's commercial and colonial interests in various ways, such as privateering and naval expeditions.
The original language of the treaty was in Latin, and the complete English title was "A treaty for the composing of differences, restraining of depredations, and establishing of peace in America, between the crowns of Great Britain and Spain, concluded at Madrid the 8/18 day of July, in the year of our Lord 1670". [10]
On 27 May, the Treaty of Madrid ended the 1654-1660 Anglo-Spanish War, and England agreed to mediate an end to the Portuguese Restoration War in return for commercial concessions. [9] The Dutch raid on the Medway in June forced England to agree to the Treaty of Breda on 31 July, and negotiations then began between the two countries for a common ...
Articles relating to the War of Devolution (1667-1668) and its related diplomatic agreements. During the war France occupied large parts of the Spanish Netherlands and Franche-Comté, both then provinces of the Holy Roman Empire under the sovereignty of the King of Spain.
Although the Anglo-Spanish War was suspended after the 1660 restoration of Charles II, it did not formally end until the Treaty of Madrid (1667). [50] Under the Treaty of the Pyrenees, signed on 5 November 1659, France gained Artois and Hainaut along its border with the Spanish Netherlands, as well as Roussillon.
Treaty of Bruges (1521) Treaty of Brussels (1656) Treaty of Cebu (1565) Treaty of El Pardo (1728) Treaty of Lisbon (1668) Treaty of London (1518) Treaty of Madrid (1630) Treaty of Madrid (1667) Treaty of Naples (1639) Treaty of Seville; Treaty of The Hague (1674) Treaty of the Pyrenees; Treaty of Tordesillas; Treaty of Tordesillas (1524) Truce ...