Treaty of Schönbrunn (1805)

The Treaty of Schönbrunn (or Convention of Schönbrunn) was a
Background
On 3 November, Prussia had signed the
Terms
By the terms of the convention, Prussia was permitted to annex Hanover, but had to cede Ansbach, the
The Convention of Schönbrunn did not contain the customary clause affirming previous treaties. Contemporaries saw it, together with Austerlitz and Pressburg, as an epochal event, marking the end of an era, since Napoleon had demonstrated no interest in maintaining the Holy Roman Empire in anything like its old form.[3]
The annexation of Hanover incensed Britain and Charles James Fox lambasted Prussia's behaviour as "a compound of everything that is contemptible in servility with everything that is odious in rapacity."[4] The annexation ultimately led to war with Britain.
References
- ^ "Schönbrunn, Treaty of (1805)", The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1979).
- ^ a b J. Rickard (2 October 2012), "Convention of Schönbrünn or Vienna, 15 December 1805", History of War.
- ^ a b c Joachim Whaley. Germany and the Holy Roman Empire, Volume II: The Peace of Westphalia to the Dissolution of the Reich, 1648–1806 (Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 634–35.
- ^ Klaus Epstein, The Genesis of German Conservatism (Princeton University Press, 1966), p. 663.