Siamese–American Treaty of Amity and Commerce
1836 treaty between Siam and the United States / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Treaty of Amity and Commerce between His Majesty the Magnificent King of Siam and the United States of America, or Roberts Treaty of 1833, was the first treaty between the United States and an Asian nation.[1]
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between Siam and the United States | |
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Type | Treaty |
Drafted | 20 March 1833 |
Signed | 14 April 1836 |
Location | Royal City of Sia-Yut'hia (commonly called Bangkok) |
Effective | 24 June 1837 |
Expiration | 21 September 1921 |
Negotiators | Chau Phaya-Phraklang, Minister of State Edmund Roberts, Minister of the United States of America |
Parties | Siam United States of America |
Languages | Thai, English Portuguese and Chinese annexed |
Full text | |
Treaty of Amity and Commerce between Siam and the United States, 1833 at Wikisource |
It established peaceful and friendly relations and commerce between the two states that have generally persisted since then. The treaty was signed on 20 March 1833 and, after ratification by both parties, it entered into force 14 April 1836. The treaty is no longer in force, having been replaced starting in 1921 by a series of subsequent treaties, but the successor treaty signed in 1966 remains in force.[2] The 2017 edition of Treaties in Force, the official U.S. government report listing treaties and other international agreements to which the United States has become a party and which are carried on the records of the Department of State, includes the treaty signed in 1966 and does not include this 1833 treaty.[3]