Spring 1713 - ending the War(s) of the Spanish Succession
The Treaty of Utrecht (1713) was a series of individual peace treaties that helped put an end to the War of Spanish Succession (known in America as "Queen Anne's War") that was being fought in order to determine who would succeed Charles II of Spain after his death.
The Treaty of Utrecht is commonly understood to refer to the peace signed to end the War of the Spanish Succession (1701 to 1714). Alternatively, the Union of Utrecht, signed in 1579, unified the northern provinces of the Netherlands and is regarded as the founding document of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands.
In 1713, France was forced to give up Newfoundland, Acadia, and the Hudson Bay Basin as part of the Treaty of Utrecht. The Treaty of Utrecht was a series of peace treaties.
Treaty of Utrecht
salutary neglect.
The Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, followed by that of Rastatt in 1714.
The Treaty of Utrecht is commonly understood to refer to the peace signed to end the War of the Spanish Succession (1701 to 1714). Alternatively, the Union of Utrecht, signed in 1579, unified the northern provinces of the Netherlands and is regarded as the founding document of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands.
The Peace of Utrecht (1713) ended the War of Spanish Succession. Its outcomes included recognition of Philip V as King of Spain, but under the condition that the French and Spanish crowns would not be united. The treaty also resulted in territorial changes in Europe and the Americas, with Britain gaining territories such as Gibraltar and Minorca.
Utrecht's population is 316,448.
latitude longitude utrecht
"Utreg" is the nickname for FC Utrecht.
Gregory of Utrecht was born in 700.