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==Negotiations== [[File:Paix_de_Lunéville-1801.jpg|thumb|Medallion honouring Napoleon and the Treaty of Lunéville]] On 25 December 1799, Bonaparte wrote to Francis II to propose peace. The imperial response was delayed.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=54}} On 20 January 1800, Austria and Britain signed a convention of alliance against France.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=58}} On 25 January, Austria responded negatively to Bonaparte's offer.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=54}} When Bonaparte renewed his offer after Marengo, however, the Austrian response was positive.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=59}} A series of three negotiations followed.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=47}} Two armistices preceded the opening of negotiations: the [[Convention of Alessandria]] (15 June 1800) in Italy and the [[Armistice of Parsdorf]] (15 July) in Germany. ===First round=== Count [[Joseph von Saint-Julien]]{{efn|The brother of [[Franz Xaver Saint-Julien|Franz Xaver von Saint-Julien]], Joseph delivered Napoleon's letter renewing his peace offer in June.}} arrived in Paris on 21 July 1800 and was received with enthusiasm. He met with French Foreign Minister [[Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord]] on 22–24 and 27 July. On 28 July, both signed a preliminary peace, which was mostly a copy of the Treaty of Campo Formio. The main difference was that the House of Austria was to be indemnified for its losses with territory in Italy, rather than in Germany. On 30 July, Saint-Julien left for Vienna accompanied by a French plenipotentiary, [[Géraud Duroc]], although the French had intended for the final treaty to be signed in Paris.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=59}} Duroc was not allowed to cross the Austrian lines. Saint-Julian arrived in [[Vienna]] on 5 August, but his preliminary peace was rejected by the emperor. On 13 August, Duroc was denied a passport and given a letter from Austrian Foreign Minister [[Johann Amadeus von Thugut]], the architect of the Anglo-Austrian alliance, to Talleyrand. Duroc returned to [[Paris]] on 20 August. It is thought that his report on the state of the Austrian forces, based on his stay at General [[Paul Kray]]'s headquarters, influenced Napoleon's decision to launch a new offensive in September.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=60}} Shortly after Duroc had delivered the Austrian response, Saint-Julien was imprisoned and accused of signing a treaty without authorisation.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=60}} ===Second round=== After the Saint-Julien fiasco, Thugut expressed a desire for Austria and Britain to negotiate together, but Napoleon rejected the idea of a peace conference. Britain, in turn, rejected French proposals for a [[separate peace]].{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=74–75}} On 7 September, British Foreign Minister, [[William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville|Lord Grenville]] dispatched a counterproject to Paris, which contained a proposed naval armistice. The offer was received on 10 September, and Napoleon extended the armistice one week to consider the proposal, which was rejected.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=76–77}} As a result, by the [[Convention of Hohenlinden]] of 20 September 1800, Austria ceded the fortresses of [[Ulm]], [[Philippsburg]] and [[Ingolstadt]] to France in exchange for a one-month extension to the armistice.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=75}} On 25 September, Thugut resigned as Austrian foreign minister.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=80}} ===Final round=== The emperor originally nominated [[Ludwig Conrad von Lehrbach]] as his plenipotentiary for the peace talks in Lunéville. As Lehrbach had signed the Convention of Hohenlinden and caused Thugut's fall, he was unacceptable to the British. He was replaced by [[Ludwig von Cobenzl]],{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=80}} who was not initially authorised to negotiate apart from the British.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=83}} The final round of negotiations thus began with a long period during which France and Austria haggled over the terms of negotiating while the armistices lapsed in late November.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=83}}{{sfn|Gagliardo|1980|p=192}} The peace conference was supposed to open in Lunéville on 7 October, but Cobenzl did not arrive for over two weeks, and Lord Grenville never appeared. By 25 October, Cobenzl, without instructions, had gone from Lunéville to Paris. He left a week later, the French having failed to separate him from his British allies.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=84–86}} Cobenzl returned for a meeting with Napoleon before his first negotiation at Lunéville on 9 November with [[Joseph Bonaparte]]. Since Cobenzl was not authorised to treat for a separate peace, and Joseph was authorised only to treat with Austria, the negotiations began at a deadlock.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=89–90}} Joseph proposed that a secret treaty could be negotiated, with the British being invited to a public conference for appearance's sake only after negotiations had been effectively complete and the treaty publicly signed and all earlier copies burnt, only in March 1801, after the expiration of the Anglo-Austrian alliance.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=94}} The British, meanwhile, had by 23 November suspended payment of the second installment of the subsidy that they had agreed to pay Austria on 20 June.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=73, 92}} During the negotiations at Lunéville, the French actively sought the alliance of [[Russian Empire|Russia]].{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=82}} After a rapprochement had been made, Napoleon withdrew the offer to admit a British representative under any circumstances on 7 December.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=96}} On 3 December, the French had won their victory at Hohenlinden.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=93}} New instructions reached Cobenzl on 26 December. He was authorised to sign a preliminary separate peace to obtain a general armistice.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=101}} In fact, an [[Armistice of Steyr|armistice covering Germany]] had already been signed by the commanders in the field on 25 December. On 26 December, the [[Second League of Armed Neutrality]] was formed.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=102}} On 27 December, Francis II informed King [[George III]] of the United Kingdom of being unable to meet his obligations as an ally. On 31 December, Cobenzl informed the French that he would negotiate without Britain.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=102–103}} The final negotiations concerned mainly boundaries and indemnities in Italy. The [[Grand Duchy of Tuscany]] was a major issue.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=110–114}} The terms of Campo Formio were accepted by Austria for Germany, and only the nature and the methods of compensation for imperial princes losing territory had to be decided. As of 30 December, the emperor was offering to accept the [[Oglio]] (rather than the [[Adda (river)|Adda]]) as the boundary of his territory in Italy if he held onto the [[Papal Legations|Legations]], and the [[Duke of Modena]] was indemnified for his losses in Italy, not Germany.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=103}} Since the fighting continued in Italy while negotiations were underway at Lunéville, Cobenzl was forced to adjust his demands successively eastward as the French advanced in Italy. By 5 January, he was willing to accept the [[Chiese (river)|Chiese]], by 9 January the [[Mincio]] and by 15 January the [[Adige]] and the {{ill|Fossa Maestra|it}}.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=104–105}} On 16 January, the Austrian and French commanders in Italy concluded the [[Armistice of Treviso]], which left the fortress of [[Mantua]] in Austrian hands. Cobenzl was not aware of that at the time of his sixth official conference with Joseph on 25 January. France demanded the cession of the fortresses of Mantua, [[Peschiera del Garda|Peschiera]], [[Legnano]], [[Ferrara]] and [[Ancona]] and the expulsion of the Grand Duke of Tuscany from Italy in return for an armistice in Italy. Since the Armistice of Steyr was expiring, both sides agreed to extend it as well. As a result, Mantua was lost to Austria.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=106–108}} On 1 February, France accepted an Austrian request to allow a representative of [[Kingdom of Naples|Naples]] and [[Kingdom of Sicily|Sicily]] to take part in the negotiations although that did not happen.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=109}} The final week was taken up by the issue of the [[Left Bank of the Rhine]] and the Empire. Austria wanted another congress like the [[Second Congress of Rastatt|Congress of Rastatt]] to make peace for the Empire. Napoleon demanded that Francis sign on behalf of himself, his own territories and the Holy Roman Empire.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|pp=114–115}} The treaty was finally signed at 5:00 in the evening on 9 February 1801.{{sfn|Roberts|1901|p=103}}
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