Spain had been wary of provoking war…
April 1779 CE
Congress had hoped to persuade Spain into an open alliance, so the first American Commission had met with the Count of Aranda in 1776.
Spain had still been reluctant to make an early commitment, owing to a lack of direct French involvement, the threat against their treasure fleets, and the possibility of war with Portugal, Spain's neighbor and a close ally of Britain.
However, Spain had affirmed its desire to support the Americans the following year, hoping to weaken Britain's empire.
In the Spanish-Portuguese War (1776-77), the Portuguese threat had been neutralized.
Spain seeks to recover Gibraltar and Menorca, Mobile and Pensacola in Florida, and to expel the British from Spanish Central America by ending their right to cut logwood in the Bay of Honduras and the coast of Campeche.
France declares that her aims are to expel the British from the Newfoundland fishery, to end restrictions on French sovereignty over Dunkirk, to regain free trade in India, to recover Senegal and Dominica, and to restore the Treaty of Utrecht provisions relating to the Anglo-French commerce.
France and Spain sign the Convention of Aranjuez, which lays out a summary of Bourbon war aims, on April 12, 1779.
Locations
Groups
Belize (colonial)
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New Spain, Viceroyalty of
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France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Portugal, Bragança Kingdom of
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Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
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Newfoundland (British Colony)
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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India, French
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Senegal (French colony)
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Dominica (British colony)
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United States of America (US, USA) (Philadelphia PA)
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