| 1802 - 886 pages
...and love of justice, the high contracting parties enter here into the nioM formal engagement to renew the severest prohibitions to their captains, whether...take, keep, or conceal on board their ships any of the objects which, in the terms of the present convention, may be reputed contraband, and respectively... | |
| William Cobbett - Anglo-French War, 1793-1802 - 1802 - 384 pages
...Contracting Parties enter here into the most formal engagement to renew the severest prohibitions 4o their Captains, whether of ships of war or merchantmen,...take, keep, or conceal on board their ships any of the objects which, in the terms of the present Convention, may be reputed contraband, and respectively... | |
| English poetry - 1802 - 888 pages
...love of justice., the high contracting parties enter here into the most formal engagement to renew the severest prohibitions to their captains, whether of ships of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, of conceal on board their ship* any ok' the objects which,- in the terms of the present convention,... | |
| History - 1802 - 882 pages
...the mofr. formal engagement, to renew the fcverell prohibitions to their captains, whether of fliips of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, or conceal, on board their fliips, any of the objecU which, in the terms of -the pred-nt convention, may be reputed contraband,... | |
| John Debritt - Europe - 1802 - 850 pages
...the moil formal engagement, to rînew the fevered prohibitions to their captains, whether of (hips of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, or conceal on board their (hips, any of the objefls which, in the terms of the prefent convention, may be reputed contraband,... | |
| John Andrew Fisher, Abraham Ward - Breach of contract - 1803 - 176 pages
...the moft formal engagement, to renew the ievereft prohibitions to their captains, whether of (hips of war, or merchantmen, to take, keep, or conceal on board their ihips, any of the objects which in the terms of the prefent convention, may be reputed contraband,... | |
| CHARLES MAYO, L.L.B - 1804 - 586 pages
...love of justice, " the high contracting parties enter here into the most formal engagement, to renew the severest '- prohibitions to their captains, whether...of ships of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, or ton" ceal, on board their ships, any of the objects which, in the terms of the present convention,... | |
| Domenico Alberto Azuni - Maritime law - 1806 - 442 pages
...love of justice, the high contracting parties enter here into the most formal engagement, to renew the severest prohibitions to their captains, whether...keep, or conceal, on board their ships, any of the objects which, in the terms of the present convention, may be reputed contraband, and respectively... | |
| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1806 - 458 pages
...their captains, whether of mips of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, or conceal, on board their jhips any of the articles which, in the terms of the present convention, may be reputed contraband." The tenor of fuch an engagement relates entirely to the immunities and obligations of Ruffian jhips;... | |
| Great Britain. High Court of Admiralty, Christopher Robinson - Admiralty - 1806 - 450 pages
...the moft formal engagement "to renew the fcvereft prohibitions to their captains, whether of fhips of war or merchantmen, to take, keep, or conceal, on board their jbips any of the articles which, in the terms of the prefent convention, may be reputed contraband."... | |
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