Signed | April 5, 1845[1] |
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Location | Larache, Morocco |
Ratified | May, 1845 |
Negotiators | Mathias Ehrenoff[1][2] Carl Ulner[1][2][3] Carstensen[3] Buselham Ben-Ali[3] Abd al-Rahman[3] |
Signatories | Mathias Ehrenoff[3] Carl Ulner[3] Buselham ben-ali[3] |
Parties | Sweden-Norway Denmark[4] Morocco |
The Treaty of Larache was a treaty between Sweden-Norway, Denmark and Morocco as a result of the Moroccan expedition (1843-45). The expedition was conducted by the combined navies of Sweden-Norway and Denmark to pressure the Moroccan sultanate into agreeing to the reversal of several old unfair treaties and to put a halt to the annual payment of tribute to Morocco in exchange for safe passage through the Mediterranean. After months of negotiations, the Moroccan sultan, Abd al-Rahman, eventually caved under the pressure from the allied powers in April 1845 in Larache as Morocco was very weak at this time due to them simultaneously fighting in the Franco-Moroccan War.[3][4] The treaty was later ratified in Stockholm in May.[3]
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).:4
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).