Convention of Saint-Cloud

The Convention of Saint-Cloud was a military convention signed on 3 July 1815 by which the French army under Marshal Davout surrendered Paris to the armies of Prince Blücher and the Duke of Wellington, ending the hostilities of the Hundred Days. The agreement was signed at Saint-Cloud, a suburb of Paris.

Under the terms of the convention, the commander of the French army, "Marshal Prince of Eckmühl" (better known as Marshal Davout) surrendered Paris to the two allied armies of the Seventh Coalition and agreed to move the French army well away from Paris, to south of the Loire.[1][2] In return, the allies promised to respect the rights and property of the local government, French civilians and members of the French armed forces.[1][2]

The French delegates who signed the treaty were:[1][2]

Coalition officers who signed the treaty were:[1][2]

The convention was approved by Davout for the French, and by Blücher and Wellington for the Seventh Coalition.[1][2]

Notes

  1. Siborne 1895, pp. 753–756.
  2. Gifford 1817, p. 1506.

References

  • Siborne, William (1895), The Waterloo Campaign, 1815, A. Constable, p. 753–756
  • Gifford, C. H. (1817). History of the Wars Occasioned by the French Revolution, from the Commencement of Hostilities in 1792, to the End of 1816: Embracing a Complete History of the Revolution. W. Lewis. p. 1506.
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