Colonial possessions The treaty returned many of the
Dutch colonies Britain occupied during the
Napoleonic Wars to the Netherlands, specifically
Surinam,
Curaçao,
Aruba,
Saba,
Sint Eustatius,
Sint Maarten,
Dutch Bengal (with the exception of the district of
Bernagore),
Dutch Coromandel,
Dutch Malacca and the
Dutch East Indies. The Dutch agreed to cede several captured colonies to Britain, including the
Dutch Cape Colony,
Dutch Malabar,
Dutch Suratte,
Demerara,
Essequibo and
Berbice. In exchange for the cession of Dutch Malabar, Britain ceded
Bangka Island to the Netherlands. Dutch subjects were granted trading rights in Demerara, Essequibo and Berbice, while Britain agreed to pay an annual fee to the Netherlands in exchange for the cession of Bernagore.
Cooperation The treaty also included a declaration issued by the Dutch government on 15 June 1814 noting that
slave ships were no longer permitted in British-controlled ports.
William I of the Netherlands had issued a royal decree in June 1814 which abolished Dutch involvement in the
Atlantic slave trade, and the British and Dutch governments were both in agreement regarding their opposition to the trade. Britain and the Netherlands also agreed to spend £2,000,000 each on improving defences in the
Low Countries, while a further set of funds, up to £3,000,000, are mentioned for the "final and satisfactory settlement of the Low Countries in union with Holland." Disputes arising from the treaty resulted in the signing of the
Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824. ==See also==