Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1805)
Appearance
The Treaty of Saint Petersburg was signed on 11 April 1805 by Great Britain and the Russian Empire and created an offensive alliance directed against Napoleon's French Empire.[1]
The two allies were joined by Austria on 9 August 1805 and by Sweden on 3 October 1805 while France was allied to Spain and a number of France's satellite republics. Sweden joined only after Britain granted subsidies that financed almost all Swedish war costs. Sweden armed 10,000 men.
This treaty was one of the main causes of the War of the Third Coalition.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Roach, Elmo E. "Anglo-Russian Relations from Austerlitz to Tilsit." International History Review 5.2 (1983): 181–200.
Categories:
- Treaties of the United Kingdom (1801–1922)
- Treaties of the Russian Empire
- Treaties of the Austrian Empire
- Napoleonic Wars treaties
- 1805 treaties
- 1805 in the Austrian Empire
- 1805 in the Russian Empire
- 1805 in the United Kingdom
- Russia–United Kingdom relations
- 1805 in British law
- April 1805 events
- Bilateral treaties of Russia
- Bilateral treaties of the United Kingdom
- European military stubs
- Treaty stubs