| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1812 - 714 pages
...the losses which they have suffered by the capture of merchant vessels by English cruizers. — VII. No vessel coming directly from England' or from the...or having been there since the publication of the present decree, shall be received into any port. — VIII. Every vessel contravening the above clause,... | |
| Pennsylvania. Supreme Court, Thomas Sergeant, William Rawle - Law reports, digests, etc - 1821 - 608 pages
...protected. The 7th article of the Berlin decree, a decree decidedly belligerent, in most of its aspects, declares that no vessel, coming directly from England,...the publication of the decree, shall be received in the ports of France; yet it was declared by the Court, in Mumford v. Phcenix Insurance Company,(c)... | |
| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1826 - 558 pages
...capture of merchant vessels, by English cruisers. ' ART. VII. No vessel coming directly from England or the English colonies, or having been there, since the publication of the present decree, shall be received into any port. ' ART. VIII. Every vessel contravening the above clause,... | |
| Jared Sparks, James Russell Lowell, Edward Everett, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1826 - 538 pages
...capture of merchant vessels, by English cruisers. ' ART. VII. No vessel coming directly from England or the English colonies, or having been there, since the publication of the present decree, shall be received into any port. ' ART. VIII. Every vessel contravening the above clause,... | |
| Theodore Dwight - Hartford Convention - 1833 - 480 pages
...losses which they have suffered by the capture of merchant vessels by English cruisers. • • 7. No vessel coming directly from England, or from the...or having been there since the publication of the present decree, shall be received into any port. 8. Every vessel contravening the above clause, by... | |
| 1825 - 436 pages
...1806, the British islands were placed in a state of blockade. By articles 7 and 8 of this decree, every vessel coming directly from England or from the English...or having been there since the publication of the said decree, was refused admission into an; port; and every vessel attempting to contravene that clause,... | |
| William Oke Manning - International law - 1839 - 430 pages
...be employed to indemnify those merchants whose property has been captured by British cruisers, vn. No vessel coming directly from England or from the English colonies, or which has been there after the present decree, shall be received into any port. vm. Any vessel contravening... | |
| William Johnson, New York (State). Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1859 - 512 pages
...belonging to England, or coming from its manufactories or colonies, is declared lawful prize. The latter declares that no vessel coming directly from England,...or from the English colonies, or having been there, after the publication *of the decree, shall be received in any port. The French ports, then, were not... | |
| François Guizot, Madame de Witt (Henriette Elizabeth) - France - 1884 - 372 pages
...English subject, shall be deemed lawful prizes. " Commerce in English merchandise is forbidden; any ships coming directly from England or from the English colonies,...or having been there since the publication of the present decree, shall not be admitted into any port." The Emperor Napoleon was right in recognizing,... | |
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