
Treaty of Baden (1714)
The Treaty of Baden, signed 7 September 1714 in Baden, Switzerland, made peace between France and the Holy Roman Empire. Together with the Treaties of Utrecht and Rastatt, it was one in a series of agreements ending the 1701 to 1713 War of the Spanish Succession.
This article is about the Treaty of Baden (1714). For other uses, see Treaty of Baden.Context
End of the War of the Spanish Succession
7 September 1714
Duke of Villars[1]
Comte de Luc[1]
de Saint-Contest[1]
Prince Eugene of Savoy[1]
Peter, Count of Goëss[1]
John Frederick, Count Seilern[1]
Background[edit]
The treaty was the first international agreement signed in the Swiss Confederacy.[2] On the margins of the conference, the signatories also secretly agreed to a Catholic union to intervene in favour of the Catholic cantons that had been defeated at the Second War of Villmergen two years earlier by the Peace of Aarau ending Catholic hegemony in the Confederacy.[2]