THE FRONDE TO MODERN DAY C. E     5 
 
  The treaty (Westphalia) saw the independence of many states including Austria gaining 
her independence from Switzerland and Netherlands from Spain.  Germany and Sweden were 
also affected by the treaty and France was able to acquire Alsace-Lorraine. The treaty also saw 
the European states including the Roman Empire, named after the Peace of Westphalia, signed in 
1648, which ended the Thirty Years' War, in which the major continental European states – the 
Holy Roman Empire, Spain, France, Sweden and the Dutch Republic – agreed to respect one 
another's territorial integrity.  The dream of the Roman Catholic to again conquer Europe was 
diminished or even killed because Protestantism had taken root.  As Encyclopedia Brittanica has 
detailed “The United Netherlands was recognized as an independent republic. The member states 
of  the Holy  Roman  Empire were  granted  full sovereignty.  The  ancient  notion  of  a  Roman 
Catholic empire of Europe, headed spiritually by a pope and temporally by an emperor, was 
permanently  abandoned,  and  the  essential  structure  of  modern  Europe  as  a  community  of 
sovereign states was established” (Encyclopedia Brittanica, 2014)
2
.  After signing the Peace of 
Rueil, sanity was brought back to the street of Paris.  However, these effects did not spread to the 
rest of the kingdom since many provinces still experienced chaos.  An example would be the 
case of a civil war between Parlement and the Governor in the city of Provence.  Troops rose to 
war, causing death and mayhem in their quest for justice.  Arrests were made and the Governor 
d’Alais taken to custody
 
.  In other parts of the kingdom, where chaos had settled, tension still 
reigned high and the king’s council was majorly affected.  Among the consequences of Fronde, 
government was forced to compromise with other institutions which were exempted from paying 
tax.  The French economy was greatly affected and it would take many years to recover from the