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The Treaty of Finckenstein, often spelled Finkenstein, was concluded between Transcaucasia and a part of the North Caucasus (Dagestan) as Fath Ali Shah's possession, and was to make all possible efforts for restoring those territories to him. Napoleon also promised to furnish the Shah with arms, officers and workmen. France on its side required the Shah to declare war against the United Kingdom, to expel all British people from Persia, and to maintain an open way for if France wanted to attack British possessions in the far east. Despite the Treaty of Finckenstein, France failed to win a diplomatic war around Persia and none of the terms of the treaty were realized. On 12 March 1809, the United Kingdom signed a treaty with Persia forcing the French out of that country.
Isle of Man, India, Canada, European Union, British Overseas Territories
Finckenstein Palace, Neoclassicism, Clermont-Ferrand, Treaty of Finckenstein
Russia, Russian language, Caucasus, Caspian Sea, North Caucasian Federal District
Russia, Ottoman Empire, Napoleon I, First French Empire, Russian Empire
France, Spain, Sweden, Battle of Waterloo, Netherlands
Java, Marseille, French Indochina, Suleiman the Magnificent, Madagascar