After the
Landing at Barcelona in May 1704 failed to capture the city, the
viceroy of Catalonia the Castilian nobleman
Francisco Antonio Fernández de Velasco y Tovar began repressing pro-Hapsburg sentiment. Among
Josep Duran's documents—which had been part of a link connecting
Prince George of Hesse-Darmstadt to the landing—was the Conference of the Three Commons, "the office where the preceding conspiracy formed" and showed the Catalonian military as "the most dominant and powerful part" of it. Velasco proceeded to jail many suspects, many of whom were members of the Conference, among whom they found one of the Catalan Austracist leaders,
Narcís Feliu de la Penya, the boss of Vigatan Jaume Puig de Perafita and the main families of Catalan nobility. This caused many undecided people to favour Charles VI, thus also increasing membership for the "Austracist party", against the behest of the viceroy. He could not detain a portion of the conspirators, as they had embarked from
Darmstadt on course to
Lisbon—participating in the
Capture of Gibraltar—where they reunited with the Charles VI. Velasco also ordered the requisition of stamps, effigies, paintings, and images of Jorge de Darmstadt. The repressive spiral continued in the following year, when judges of the Real Audience of Catalonia, members of the Council of the Hundred, and bishop Benito de Sala y de Caramany were arrested. Finally, Velasco ordered the suppression of the Conference of the Commons. == Negotiations ==