The treaty placed a heavy burden on Baldwin in forcing him to surrender his rights over Achaea (to which the
Duchy of Athens was also subject), as it represented the richest part of his empire still in Frankish hands. Nonetheless, the growing power of Charles represented Baldwin's best chance to recover Constantinople, although had the crusade gone forth as planned, he would probably have found himself more ruled than ruler in the presence of
Angevin arms. In the event, the launch of the
Eighth Crusade delayed any expedition against Constantinople, and
Michael VIII Palaeologus, by keeping afoot the project of unifying Greek and Latin Churches, had it put off until 1280. Baldwin had died in 1273, shortly after the nuptials of Philip and Beatrice. At the eleventh hour, the
Sicilian Vespers put an end to all plans for the long-delayed crusade by burning the invasion fleet in
Messina harbor. The subsequent
war sapped the energy of the Angevins, and Constantinople remained safely beyond their grasp. The major practical effect of the treaty was to move Achaea into the Angevin orbit, a process accelerated in later years by Charles. Already invested in Albania, the Angevins would now be players in the politics of Frankish Greece until 1387. Unfortunately for them, the succession they had hoped to secure through the marriage pacts and reversionary clauses of the treaty would not go uncontested. When Charles' son
Philip of Sicily died in 1271, having had no children by Isabelle, Charles duly claimed Achaea by reversion. However Isabelle,
her younger sister, and their heirs would challenge the Angevins for the possession of the principality until 1383. ==Notes==