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2001 | 70 |

Article title

Misja dyplomatyczna Johna Jaya do Hiszpanii w latach 1779-1782. Oczekiwania i rozczarowania

Content

Title variants

PL
John Jay’s Diplomatic Mission to Madrid 1779-1782. Expectations and Dissapointments

Languages of publication

Abstracts

PL
Wydanie publikacji dofinansowane przez Komitet Badań Naukowych
EN
The article treats of the negotiations carried on by John Jay, the American Minister Plenipotentiary in Madrid, in 1780-1782. First of all the authoress analyses the Spanish attitude towards the question of the British colonies’ independence. The aim of J. Jay’s mission was to sign the Treaty of Alliance, Amity and Commerce. The instructions also obligated him to secure: 1) the right of free navigation on the Mississipi River, 2) the access to the Spanish ports below 31° of latitude and 3) the financial help. The negotiations with the Spanish Secretary of State, count of Floridablanca, was of no effect. Jay wasn’t admit as official representative of the American government. The instructions’ change in 1781 didn’t temper the Spanish attitude. Finally none of the aims was achieved. The United States obtained a little loan only. In the interests of the weak Spain was to keep balance, that is to weaken as much as possible the British power and to keep their colonies under the control of the metropolis at the same time. However the Spanish policy’s principle of festina lente missed an opportunity of advantageous settlement of two questions: the borders and the navigation on Mississipi. From 1783 they would be the dominant matters of argument between the neighbours.

Keywords

Year

Volume

70

Physical description

Dates

published
2001

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11089/13540

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.hdl_11089_13540
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