The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 1John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1929 - Commonwealth countries |
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Page 76
... subjects to any places where [ the Spaniards and Portuguese ] are planted , but only to seek their traffic by their own discoveries in other places , whereof there are so infinite dimensions of vast and great territories as themselves ...
... subjects to any places where [ the Spaniards and Portuguese ] are planted , but only to seek their traffic by their own discoveries in other places , whereof there are so infinite dimensions of vast and great territories as themselves ...
Page 188
... subjects of States at this and earlier times which were entirely indistinguishable from acts of war , but which were not regarded as creating a state of war between the States themselves . The line between peace and war was not so ...
... subjects of States at this and earlier times which were entirely indistinguishable from acts of war , but which were not regarded as creating a state of war between the States themselves . The line between peace and war was not so ...
Page 548
... subjects in international law which have occasioned more controversy than the position in time of war of enemy goods carried in neutral ships , and of neutral goods carried in enemy ships . From the middle of the seventeenth century ...
... subjects in international law which have occasioned more controversy than the position in time of war of enemy goods carried in neutral ships , and of neutral goods carried in enemy ships . From the middle of the seventeenth century ...
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Admiralty Africa alliance American appointed Assembly attack Barbados Board of Trade Britain British Bute Canada capture Carolina Charles charter CHBE Choiseul claims coast colonies colonists commerce Company courts Crown declared defence Dutch eighteenth century Empire England English Englishmen established Europe favour fisheries fishing fleet force foreign France French George George III Government governor grant Hakluyt Hist House Ibid imperial important Indian interest islands Jamaica King land Leeward Islands London Lord Massachusetts ment mercantilist merchants ministers Minorca monopoly mother country naval navigation Navigation Acts Navy negotiations neutral Newfoundland North organisation Parliament peace Pitt Plantations planters political ports Portugal Portuguese Privy Council Protestant Prussia royal Royal African Company sailed secure sent seqq settlement settlers Shelburne ships slaves South South Sea Company Spain Spaniards Spanish success sugar territory tion treaty troops vessels Virginia voyage Walpole West Indies William York