Treaty anglo-Dutch of 1814
The Treated anglo-Dutch of 1814 fur signed between the Plain Provinces of the Netherlands and the the United Kingdom on August 13rd, 1814 with London.
By this treaty, the English returned to the Dutchmen their colonial possessions to Africa, America and Asia, such as they were before the beginning of the Napoleonean Guerres, except for the Cape of Good Hope and of the South American establishments of Berbice, Demerara and Essequibo, where the Dutchmen preserved commercial laws.
Moreover, the English yielded the island of Bangka in exchange of the establishment of Cochin and dependences on the dimension of Malabar in India. The Dutchmen yielded the district of Bernagore close to Calcutta in exchange of an annual right.
The two parts also got along on an improvement of the defense of the Netherlands.
The English in addition agreed to pay a million books to the Sweden in compensation of claims on the Guadeloupe.
The different ones born from the application from this treaty will bring to the signature of another treaty, the Traité of London of 1824 .
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