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  1. At the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the great European powers stated in the Declaration of 20 March that Switzerland’s perpetual neutrality was in the interests of the common good. They held out the prospect of recognition under international law. Eight months later, the Great Powers signed the Treaty of Paris on 20 November 1815 ,

  2. Il ne rentre à Paris que le 8 juillet 1815, après le désastre de Waterloo. Analyse des images Architecte, peintre, graveur d’origine allemande, grand voyageur de surcroît, Antoine Ignace Melling (1763-1831) a été successivement au service du sultan ottoman Selim III, de l’impératrice Joséphine et des Bourbons.

  3. History of France - France, 1815–1940: King Louis XVIII’s second return from exile was far from glorious. Neither the victorious powers nor Louis’s French subjects viewed his restoration with much enthusiasm, yet there seemed to be no ready alternative to Bourbon rule. The allies avenged themselves for the Hundred Days by writing a new and more severe Treaty of Paris. France lost several ...

  4. Appendices: A. Opinions of British and other statesmen on the doctrine "Free ships make free goods, " and on the Declaration of Paris and its effects. B. Privateers their commission and instructions. C. Letters of marque, or Privateer's commission, 1812. D. Instructions for privateers, 21 June 1815. E. American privateers.

  5. Second Treaty of Paris, November 20, 1815. Definitive treaty between Great Britain and France. In the name of the most Holy and Undivided Trinity. Entrance of the Allies into Paris. The Allied Powers having by their united efforts, and by the success of their arms, preserved France and Europe from the convulsions with which they were menaced by ...

  6. 1 de fev. de 2013 · ACT, No. XV.— Declaration of the Powers, on the Abolition of the Slave Trade, of the 8th February 1815. [1] The Treaty was drawn up in French as specified in the Article CXX of the General Treaty of the Final Act of the Congress of Vienna, as it was the lingua franca of diplomacy at the time. [2] This translation was laid before the British ...

  7. 1814/1815. The Powers signatories of the Treaty of Paris of 1814 adopted, on 19 March 1815, Regulations regarding the rank of diplomatic agents Declaration concerning the abolition of the slave trade on 8 February 1815, and Regulation regarding free navigation on rivers on 29 March 1815 (Martens, Noutveau Receuil, V. II, 1818, pp. 432, 434, 449).