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In order to afford to the commercial and maritime interests of every nation the security which is desired, Russia and the Sublime Porte will admit Consuls into their ports situated upon the coasts of the Black Sea, in conformity with the principles of international law.

Article XIII. The Black Sea being neutralized according to the terms of Article XI. the maintenance or establishment upon its coast of military-maritime arsenals becomes alike unnecessary and purposeless; in consequence. His Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias and His Imperial Majesty the Sultan engage not to establish or to maintain upon that coast any military-maritime arsenal.

8. Treaty of London, 1871.

Article I. The Black Sea remains open as heretofore to the mercantile marine of all nations.

Article II. The principle of the closing of the Straits of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles in time of peace invariably established, as the ancient rule of the Ottoman Empire, and confirmed by the Treaty of Paris of March 30, 1856, remains in full force.

Article III. His Imperial Majesty the Sultan, by virtue of the right of sovereignty which he exercises over the Straits of the Bosphorus and of the Dardanelles, reserves to himself in time of peace the power of opening them by way of temporary exception, in case only that the interests of the security of his Empire should cause him to recognize the necessity of the presence of vessels of war of the non-riverain Powers of the Black Sea.

Article IV. It is agreed that the stipulation contained in the preceding Article shall for the future replace those of Articles XI., XIII. and XIV. of the Treaty of Paris of March 30, 1856, as well as the Special Convention concluded between the Sublime Porte and Russia, and annexed to the said Article XIV.

NOTE. Dr Holland's Lecture on the Treaty Relations of Russia and Turkey, from 1774 to 1853 (published by Macmillan and Co. 1877), is a useful little work in connection with some of the subjects noticed in this Appendix.

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restore, by British Parliament,
1815, 221, n. 1

Ashburton, Lord, Commissioner to
the United States, 148
Ashburton capitulation, the, 152,

153
Assessors under the Treaty of Wash-

ington, 1871, 448, 449
Assiento Treaty, the, 414, n. 2
Assignments in transitu, 212-214
Assistance by treaty, 158-160*
Austin, John, cited, 143, n. 3
Austria, cruelty towards Poland, 41

war with Hungary, 1849,70
Austrian intervention in Italy in
1831, 1832, 57; in 1849, 68
Ayala noticed, 33, n. 2

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there must be an actual,

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Blockading squadron, absence of,
342, 343

Bluntschli, Professor, quoted, 167
Bolivar, the, 280-282

Booty on land by military forces,
221, n. 1

Bosphorus, closing the, 105
Britain, Great, reply of, to the
despatch of Austria, Prussia, and
Russia, 1821, 44

Cruisers, Instruction to, 365,

n. 1
Brown v. the United States, 177,
182

Brune, General, cited, 219, n. 1
Brymer v. Atkins, cited, 247, n. 2
Bulgaria, revolt in, 1875, 165
Bynkershoek, his value as a writer
on International Law, 35-36
on close and open

seas, 99

-

on Privateering, 241
on violation of neu-

tral territory, 306

C.

Cadiz, regulations as to Tort of in
time of War, 176, n. 1

1

1

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special cases of, 435

Carlos, Don, in Spain, 1834, 60
Caroline, case of the, 146-148, 386
Cartel ships, 188
Cassius, the, 239

Cass, General, on the right of
search, 365-367

Casus fœderis, 158-162, 302
Cavour's, Count, despatch to An-
tonelli, 74

Certificate of ship's registry, 374,n.2
Cession of territory, 394-396
Charlemagne, his influence on civi-
lization, 22

Chateaubriand, cited, 78, n. 1
Chavasse ex parte re Grazebrook,
209-301

Chesapeake, the, 304
Chivalry, 26

Christianity, its influence, 22-24
Civil Law, its influence on Inter-
national Law, 26-28

War, state of belligerency in,
recognised in the United States,
228, 229

Claims, submission of, under Treaty
of Washington, 1871, 449-450
Clarendon's, Lord, despatch on the
affair at Sinope, 72

-

condemnation of priva-

teering, 231

answer to merchants
in the Russia trade, 1854, 189
Clearance or transire, when granted
under 17 and 18 Vict. c. 104,
374 n. 2

Coal, whether contraband, 338, n. 1
effect of supply to a bellige-
rent according to Geneva Award,
1871, 464

Cockburn, Lord Chief Justice, judg-
ment of in R. v. Tivnan, 413

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treaties of, 108

treaty of, between
France and Great Britain, 110
Commercen, the, 207
Commercial character, 198
Commissions, regular, necessary to
make hostilities lawful, 224, 225
foreign, to cruise, 243

-245
Compensation on account of the
forced sinking of English Vessels
in the Seine, 1870, 300
Compensation, liability to make
for breach of Foreign Enlist-
ment Act, 292-296

on account of the

Alabama, 296
Compromise, cases of, 151-153
Condemnation only in captor's
courts, 249 250

for resistance to

right of search, 369-370

1

of prize in neutral

port, 250
Confederate Congress, Act of, Au-
gust, 1861, 191

Cruisers and the Ge-
neva Award, 1871, 466, 467
Conference of Geneva, 1871, 296
Confiscation of debts, 180-183
Consignors, neutral reservation of
risk to, 215

Constantia, case of the, 355, n. 1

Constantinople,

1876-77, 166

125-127

Conference

at,

Consular institution, history of the,

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Crown, power of, to cede territory,

394, n. 2

Cruelty in war condemned, 216
Cruiser commissioned by two dif-
ferent powers, 245, 246
Cruisers belonging to a revolted
province, 251; their status, 261
-263
Cruisers, British, instructions to
Commanders of, 365, n. 2
Cruisers with their prizes in neu-
tral ports, modern regulations as
to, 312, 313

Cruising under a foreign commis-
sion, how treated by statute, 410
Crusades, influence of the, 26
Cushing, Mr Caleb, on the Treaty
of Washington, 297

Cussy, Baron de, on the conquest
of Algeria, 408, n. 2
Customary rules of International
Law, 7

D.

Daly, Judge, quoted, 223

Damages, measure of, in illegal
captures, 242

Danish instructions to cruisers,
March, 1810, 370, 374, n. 2
Danous, the, 196

Dardanelles, closing the, 105
Treaties relating to,

504-509

Dayton's, Mr, correspondence with
Mons, Thouvenel on privateering,
234

Debts, confiscation of, 180
Declaration of Paris, 1856, 480, 481
Delaware Bay, 103

Del Col v. Arnold, 242
Denmark, furnishing troops to Rus-
sia in the Russo-Swedish War,
1788, 302

Derby, Lord, speech on the recog-
nition of the Confederate States,
Feb. 1862, 89

on Guarantee Treaties, 167
Despatches, hostile, conveyance of,
351-363, 481

of an ambassador, con-
veyance of, not necessarily hos-

tile, 352

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