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 195
EXTRAVAGANT CLAIMS TO SOVEREIGNTY OF SEA 195 to appropriate or to exercise dominion over vast areas of the ocean and the restriction of commerce and navigation therein , the right to sea fisheries , inshore as well as deep sea , and the ...
EXTRAVAGANT CLAIMS TO SOVEREIGNTY OF SEA 195 to appropriate or to exercise dominion over vast areas of the ocean and the restriction of commerce and navigation therein , the right to sea fisheries , inshore as well as deep sea , and the ...
Page 196
That such claims should first appear in the Mediterranean was only natural , for the trading cities of Italy were the chief sufferers from the depredations of Saracens and Greeks in those waters . The extension of jurisdiction involving ...
That such claims should first appear in the Mediterranean was only natural , for the trading cities of Italy were the chief sufferers from the depredations of Saracens and Greeks in those waters . The extension of jurisdiction involving ...
Page 204
He met the claim that the sea is common to the use of all and incapable of appropriation by evidence of numerous cases to the contrary . He agreed that Spain and Portugal could not support their claims because they had no sufficient ...
He met the claim that the sea is common to the use of all and incapable of appropriation by evidence of numerous cases to the contrary . He agreed that Spain and Portugal could not support their claims because they had no sufficient ...
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