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After suffering military defeats in the War of the Third Coalition,
which broke out in 1805, Russia and Prussia each secured a
treaty with France in 1807, ceding territory to their enemy.
Since the Treaty of Tilsit deprived Prussia of its great-power
status, it left Russia and France as the only two major powers
on the European continent. The treaty allowed Russia to fight
wars on other fronts and extend its boundaries. In the ensuing
conflicts, Russia gained Georgia, neighboring areas in the
Caucasus, territory on the Black Sea, and Finland as an autonomous
grand duchy.
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