The
Treaty of Westminster of 1674 was the
peace treaty that ended the
Third Anglo-Dutch War. It should not
be confused with the
Treaty
of Westminster of 1654 that ended the
First Anglo-Dutch War. It was signed
on
19 February 1674
(
New Style) by
Charles II of England and ratified by
the
States-General of
the Netherlands on
5 March 1674. England was forced to sign the treaty as
Parliament would not allow more money to be spent on the war and
had become aware of the secret
Treaty of
Dover in which Charles had promised
Louis XIV of France to convert to
Roman Catholicism at an opportune
moment. The English were dismayed by the unexpected fact that Dutch
raiders managed to capture more English ships than vice versa and
that
New Amsterdam had been retaken by
the Dutch in 1673. As such, it can easily be seen as an English
defeat, as they had started the war, and the Dutch managed to make
the war so costly that the English had to withdraw.
Most of
the initial peace conditions demanded by the English in the
Accord of Heeswijk of 1672 were
not met, but the Dutch paid two million guilders (down from an original demand of ten
million) to be paid over a period of three years (basically to
compensate for the loss of French subsidies) and again affirmed the
English right of salute, their Dominium Marium from
Land's
End
northward to Staten Land
. This was qualified by the condition that
Dutch fishery would in no way be impeded by this right. The treaty
conditions of 1668, regulating trade and shipping, were
reconfirmed. As regards territorial disputes, the treaty was a
typical
status quo ante
arrangement:
- That whatsoever countries, islands, towns, ports, castles,
or forts have or shall be taken on both sides, since the time the
late unhappy war broke out, either in Europe or elsewhere, shall be
restored to the former lord or proprietor, in the same condition
they shall be in when the peace itself shall be
proclaimed
Peace was
proclaimed at Whitehall
on 27 February (New Style) at 10:00 AM.
The
condition implied that New
Netherland, retaken by Cornelis Evertsen the
Youngest in 1673, would henceforth again be an English
possession and that Suriname
, captured by
the Dutch in 1667, would remain their colony,
legalising the status quo of 1667. These issues had been
left undecided by the
Peace of Breda
of that year, an
uti
possidetis agreement.
Also the islands of Tobago
, Saba
, St Eustatius
and Tortola
, taken by
the English in 1672, would have to be returned.
As the peace could not be communicated quickly to all parts of the
world, different dates had been determined upon which legal
hostilities would end.
From the Soundings
to the coast of Norway, fighting should end by 8 March; south to
Tangier
by 7 April; from there to the Equator by 5 May and in the rest of the world after
24 October 1674.
See also
External links