The other treaty dictated peace terms between the same king and the Free City of Lübeck.
The rest was a formal demand to King Louis XII of France to settle his disputes with Pope Julius II.
The original peace treaties are preserved in entirety at the Danish National Archives in Copenhagen and at the Public Library of Lübeck.
The French envoy Pierre Cordier's original report documenting his visit can be found in Malmö and at the public library in Besançon.
The list of both sides' and foreign representatives along with their intents, is longer than in the Dano-Lübeckian, but the agreement addresses a meeting which is planned for the 24 June 1513 where 12 men from Denmark and Norway, and 12 men from Sweden shall decide whether or not Sweden will accept King John or his heir Christian as the true lord and King of the Swedish realm.