The second 'Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle' (
Aachen) of
1748 ended the
War of the Austrian Succession. A
congress assembled at the
Imperial Free City of Aachen, in the west of the
Holy Roman Empire, on
April 24,
1748. The resulting treaty was signed on
October 18,
1748.
France and
Britain mostly negotiated the treaty, and the other powers involved in the war followed their lead. The terms of the treaty were:
#A general restitution of conquests. The French returned the
Austrian Netherlands and the Dutch
barrier towns to their owners, and restored
Madras in
India to the British. The British, on their part, returned the fortress of
Louisbourg on
Cape Breton Island in
Canada.
#Empress
Maria Theresa had to cede the duchies of
Parma,
Piacenza and
Guastalla in northern Italy to her enemy, Duke
Philip of Parma from
Spain, and various territories in western
Lombardy to her ally, the
King of Sardinia.
#The
Duchy of Modena and the
Republic of Genoa were restored.
#The
Asiento contract and the right to send an annual vessel to the
Spanish colonies, both guaranteed to
Great Britain by the
March 16,
1713 Treaty of Utrecht, were confirmed and renewed.
In essence, the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle and the War of Austrian Succession concluded
status quo ante bellum. In the commercial struggle between Britain and France in the
West Indies,
Africa, and India, nothing was settled; the treaty was thus no basis for a lasting peace.
In France, there was a general resentment at what was seen as a foolish throwing away of advantages (particularly in the Austrian Netherlands, which had largely been conquered by the brilliant strategy of
Marshal Saxe), and it came to be popular in
Paris to use the phrase ''bête comme la paix'' ("stupid as the peace").
By the same token, British colonists in
New England resented the return of
Louisbourg to the French after they had captured the stronghold in a 46-day siege. This resentment was an early seed of the later
American Revolution [citation needed].
Italy, however, gained stability for the first time in the 18th century. The new territorial settlement and the accession of the pacific
Ferdinand VI of Spain allowed the Aachen settlement to last until the outbreak of the
French Revolutionary Wars in
1792. Spain later raised objections to the Asiento clauses, and the
Treaty of Madrid, signed on
October 5,
1750, stipulated that Great Britain surrendered her claims under those clauses in return for a sum of £100,000.
See also
★
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1668)
★
List of treaties