Treaties of Reichenbach (1813)

[1] In exchange for this aid, the king of Prussia agreed to cede the principality of Hildesheim and other territories to the Electorate of Hanover, enlarging the latter by 250,000-300,000 people.

[5] The conditions of peace to be presented to Napoleon included:[6] The British did not sign on the Reichenbach convention and were unhappy with the limited demands of the Allies.

Lord Castlereagh informed his representatives in the Allied camp, Cathcart and Stewart, that Spain and Sicily were not to be abandoned, Ferdinand VII was to be restored to the Spanish throne, Holland was to be given up by France and the Kingdom of Italy returned to its old masters.

The peace terms presented by Metternich to Napoleon at Dresden were peremptorily refused by the French emperor.

Although a French representative, Caulaincourt, was dispatched to the Prague Peace Congress of July-August 1813, he had not been given the requisite credentials by Napoleon.