Treaty of Fontainebleau
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The Treaty of Fontainebleau refers to a number of agreements signed at Fontainebleau, France, often at the Château de Fontainebleau:
- October 24, 1745 creating a military alliance between Louis XV of France and Charles Edward Stuart.
- October 27, 1807 signed between Spain and France, defined the occupation of Portugal and proposed the division of the country into three kingdoms as a result of the Peninsular War - the Kingdom of Northern Lusitania, Portugal (reduced in size) and the Algarve (expanded to include Alentejo).
- April 11, 1814 exiling Napoleon Bonaparte as the Emperor of Elba, with an income of 2,000,000 francs a year from France.
- The Treaty of Paris (1763) is sometimes called the Treaty of Fontainebleau - referring to a secret agreement of the prior year.
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