In the second treaty, on 22 July, Spain ceded the
Captaincy General of Santo Domingo to France in exchange for keeping
Gipuzkoa. The French also came at night to sign the peace treaty between France and Spain in which Spain was represented by Domingo de Iriarte, who signed the treaty in the mansion of Ochs, the Holsteinerhof. Spain would
recapture the area in 1808/1809 and maintain it under
a light colonial control until 1822. Following the
Haitian Revolution the French claim to what is now the
Dominican Republic would be
de facto inherited by Haiti which
occupied the area from 1822 to 1844. France would cede its
de jure claim over the eastern part of the island to Spain in the 1814
Treaty of Paris. Owing partially to that, France refused to recognize any Haitian claim to the territory when it negotiated the
Haiti Independence Debt and
de jure recognition of Haiti's independence in 1825. These treaties with Prussia and Spain broke the alliance between the French Republic's two main opponents of the First Coalition. During the negotiations, France sought to re-gain
Louisiana from Spain, but they were unsuccessful at achieving this in the negotiations. ==Other provisions and treaty partners==