- Treaty of Joinville
The Treaty of Joinville was signed in secret in December
1584 by the French Catholic League, led by France's first family of Catholic nobles, the Guises, andHabsburg Spain . In this treaty, Philip II, King of Spain, agreed to finance the Catholic League. The aim of the treaty was to form a Catholic alliance against Protestant forces, notablyElizabeth I of England, in response to the potential succession to the French throne ofHenry of Navarre , at this point a Protestant.In reality, there was little concerted effort on the part of either signatory to act against Elizabeth, as the Catholic League's position in France deteriorated as Henry IV gained support. However, Elizabeth was so disturbed by the nightmare scenario of a Catholic alliance between France and Spain against England, the prospect of which had been remote given the prolonged Habsburg-Valois conflict, that she for the first time endorsed direct military intervention in the
Spanish Netherlands . This Spanish territory was in the process of an uprising against Spanish rule; the Spanish response was a crackdown under a hard-line military governor, the Duke of Parma.Elizabeth's decision represented a complete reversal of her previous policy, which was not to support rebels in circumstances where they were rebelling against legitimate authority. She in turn might have become vulnerable to revolts from English Catholics, so this U-turn demonstrates how much the Treaty of Joinville alarmed her.
As a direct consequence, Elizabeth signed the
Treaty of Nonsuch with the United Provinces in1585 , financing an expedition to the Netherlands, led byRobert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester of between seven and eight thousand soldiers. This was the catalyst for the war between England and Spain which climaxed in the launch of theSpanish Armada in1588 .ee also
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French Wars of Religion
*List of treaties References
*Murphy, D; Keen, A; Tillbrook, M; Walsh-Atkins, P. "England 1485-1603". ISBN 0-00-327124-2
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