The War of the Second Coalition had…
September 1801 CE
The War of the Second Coalition had started well for the coalition, with successes in Egypt.
After France's victories at Marengo and Hohenlinden, Austria, Russia and Naples had asked for peace, with Austria eventually signing the Treaty of Lunéville.
Nelson's victory at Copenhagen on April 2, 1801, had halted the creation of the League of Armed Neutrality and leads to a negotiated ceasefire.
Bonaparte had first made truce proposals to British foreign secretary Lord Grenville as early as 1799.
Because of the hardline stance of Grenville and Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger, their distrust of Bonaparte, and obvious defects in the proposals, they had been rejected out of hand.
However, Pitt had resigned in February 1801 (over King George's unwillingness to support Catholic emancipation in Ireland), and had been replaced by the more accommodating Henry Addington, who Henry Addington on March 14 had become First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer, effectively Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Addington's foreign secretary, Robert Jenkinson, Lord Hawkesbury, had immediately opened communications with Louis Guillaume Otto, the French commissary for prisoners of war in London, through whom Bonaparte had made his earlier proposals.
Hawkesbury gad stated that he wanted to open discussions on terms for a peace agreement.
Otto, generally under detailed instructions from Bonaparte, has engaged in negotiations with Hawkesbury through the summer of 1801.
Unhappy with the dialogue with Otto, Hawkesbury has sent diplomat Anthony Merry to Paris, who has opened a second line of communications with the French foreign minister Talleyrand.
By mid-September, written negotiations have progressed to the point where Hawkesbury and Otto meet to draft a preliminary agreement.
On September 30, they sign the preliminary agreement in London; it will be published the next day.