's determination to recover
Silesia was a key factor in the 1756
Diplomatic Revolution The terms of the peace largely failed to resolve the issues that caused the war in the first place, while most of the signatories either resented the concessions they made, or felt they had failed to obtain what they were due. These factors led to the diplomatic re-alignment known as the 1756
Diplomatic Revolution, and the subsequent
Seven Years' War. Prussia, which doubled in size and wealth with the acquisition of Silesia, was the most obvious beneficiary, Austria arguably the biggest loser. Maria Theresa did not see acceptance of the Pragmatic Sanction as any kind of concession, while she deeply resented Britain's insistence that Austria cede Silesia and the concessions made in Italy. On the other hand, the Habsburgs survived a potentially disastrous crisis, regained the Austrian Netherlands and largely retained their position in Italy. Administrative and financial reforms made Austria stronger in 1750 than 1740, while its strategic position was strengthened by installing Habsburgs as rulers of key territories in Northwest Germany, the
Rhineland and Northern Italy. The Spanish considered their territorial gains in Italy inadequate, failed to recover
Menorca or
Gibraltar, and viewed the reassertion of British commercial rights in the
Americas as an insult.
Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia felt he had been promised the
Duchy of Parma, but had to content himself with minor cessions from Austria. The war confirmed the decline of the Dutch Republic as a
great power, and exposed the weakness of their
Barrier forts, which proved unable to stand up to modern artillery. Few Frenchmen understood the desperate financial state that required the return of their gains in the Austrian Netherlands; combined with the lack of tangible benefits for helping Prussia, it led to the phrase "as stupid as the Peace". This view was widely shared; many French statesmen felt Louis XV had panicked, while English writer and politician,
Horace Walpole, wrote "wonderful it is...why the French have lost so much blood and treasure to so little purpose". As a result of the Treaty
Charles Edward Stuart, the Jacobite Pretender to the thrones of Britain was arrested and exiled from France. The decline of the Dutch Republic as a military power exposed the vulnerability of
Hanover,
George II's German possession. In exchange for restoring the Barrier forts, France insisted on the return of
Louisbourg, the capture of which in 1745 was one of the few clear British successes of the war. This caused fury in both Britain and America, where it was seen as benefitting the Dutch and Hanover at the expense of the American colonies.
John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, the lead British negotiator, failed to include the
Utrecht terms in the list of Anglo-Spanish agreements renewed in the Preliminaries to the treaty. When he tried to amend the final version, the Spanish refused to approve it, threatening the lucrative import and export trade between the two countries. Since it was equally valuable to the Spanish, they later agreed terms in the October 1750
Treaty of Madrid, but it was another source of popular dissatisfaction with the treaty. Austrian resentment of British 'disloyalty' was mirrored in
London; many questioned the value of the financial subsidies paid to
Vienna, and suggested Prussia as a more suitable ally. In the 1752
Treaty of Aranjuez, Austria, Spain and Sardinia agreed to respect each other's boundaries in Italy, ending conflict in this region for nearly fifty years, and allowing Maria Theresa to focus on Germany. Her determination to regain Silesia, combined with a feeling the Treaty had left many issues unresolved, meant that it was seen as an armistice, not a peace. The treaty would mark the end of the Anglo-French India-based
First Carnatic War. The London celebrations of the signing of the treaty featured music specially composed by
George Frideric Handel, the
Music for the Royal Fireworks. ==References==