The Treaty of Aranjuez (1801) was signed on 21 March 1801 between France and Spain. It confirmed a previous secret agreement in which Spain agreed to exchange Louisiana for territories in Tuscany. The treaty also stipulated Spain's cession of Louisiana to be a "restoration", not a retrocession.[1]: 50–52
Talleyrand used the treaties to create the Kingdom of Etruria for Charles IV's son-in-law Louis I, and in return Spain announced the transfer of Louisiana. However, these arrangements proved short-lived; France sold Louisiana to the US in 1803, while Etruria was dissolved in 1807.
After the November 1799 Coup of 18 Brumaire, the new government of First Consul Napoleon and his deputy Talleyrand made colonial expansion a key policy. The coup was partially financed by wealthy merchants, who wanted to re-establish control of sugar-producing islands in the Caribbean.[3] These were extremely profitable; prior to the abolition of slavery in 1793, the French colony of Saint-Domingue produced more sugar and coffee than all the British West Indies combined.[4]
For Napoleon, Louisiana was to serve as the hub of this new empire, as well as a source of food and slaves for French plantations in the West Indies.[5] A recent addition to the immense Spanish Empire in the Americas, possession brought Spain into conflict with the United States, whose western expansion required access to the Mississippi River and the port of New Orleans. American settlers had been moving into this area for decades, despite diplomatic efforts to manage it, such as the 1795 Pinckney's Treaty. By 1800, nearly 400,000 or 7.3% of Americans lived in trans-Appalachian territories, including the new states of Kentucky and Tennessee.[6]
At the same time, Spain's alliance with France and the resulting 1798-1802 Anglo-Spanish War led to a British naval blockade that severely impacted their economy. This was highly dependent on trade with its South American colonies, particularly the import of silver from Mexico.[7] Conflict over American encroachment was both costly and potentially damaging, since Spain relied on American ships to evade the British blockade.[8]
These factors made transferring Louisiana attractive to Spanish chief minister Manuel Godoy, but he needed it to be politically acceptable to Charles IV of Spain. Charles' wife Maria Luisa of Parma was the sister of Ferdinand of Parma, whose Duchy of Parma had been occupied by France since 1796; to compensate, Talleyrand proposed creating a kingdom for Louis, younger son of Ferdinand, and nephew of Maria Luisa. Since the territories Talleyrand proposed to exchange were held by Austria and the Kingdom of Naples respectively, it required the negotiation of a series of interlocking agreements.[9]
Provisions
The terms of the treaty were vague, Clause II stating 'it may consist of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany...or the three Roman legations or of any other continental provinces of Italy which form a rounded state;' Spain would hand over Louisiana once this was confirmed.[10]
Negotiations between France and Britain to end the War of the Second Coalition resulted in the March 1802 Treaty of Amiens; although widely viewed as a short-lived truce, it gave Napoleon an opportunity to activate his plans for North America. In December 1801, 30,000 veteran French troops landed on Saint-Domingue; shortly after, Spain confirmed the transfer of Louisiana to France.[13]
The presence of French troops in the Caribbean caused great concern in the US, but by October 1802, it was clear the expedition was a catastrophic failure; its leader, General Charles Leclerc died of yellow fever, along with an estimated 22,000 of his men. Without Saint-Domingue, Napoleon concluded Louisiana was irrelevant, and with France and Britain once again on the verge of hostilities, he decided to sell the territory to prevent it from being annexed by British forces garrisoned in nearby Canada. In April 1803, the US purchased the territory for $15 million, or 80 million francs.[14]
The elaborate shuffling of Italian territories ultimately led nowhere. Etruria was dissolved and incorporated into France in 1807, while much of pre-Napoleonic Italy was restored by the Congress of Vienna in 1815, including the Grand Duchies of Tuscany and Parma.[15]
Maltby, William (2008). The Rise and Fall of the Spanish Empire. Palgrave. ISBN978-1403917928.
McLynn, Frank (1997). Napoleon; a biography. Jonathan Cape. ISBN978-0224040723.
Rodriguez, Junius P (2002). The Louisiana Purchase: A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO.
Sánchez, Rafael Torres (2015). Constructing a Fiscal Military State in Eighteenth Century Spain. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN978-1137478658.
Stearns, Peter N.; Langer, William Leonard (2001). The Encyclopedia of world history: ancient, medieval, and modern. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN0-395-65237-5.
Tarver, Micheal; Slape, Emily (2016). The Spanish Empire; An Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN978-1610694216.