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" To a position of this novel nature Great Britain cannot accede. She knows of no exception to the rule, that all treaties are put an end to by a subsequent war between the same parties... "
The Treaty of Ghent, and the Fisheries: Or, The Diplomatic Talents of John ... - Page 11
1824 - 27 pages
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The Diplomacy of the United States: Being an Account of the ..., Volume 2

Theodore Lyman - 1828 - 552 pages
...independent nations, not admitted by treaty, were excluded, the duration of the privileges must depend on the duration of the instrument, by which they were...parties ;—she cannot, therefore, consent to give to her diplomatic relations with one state a different degree of permanency from that, on which her...
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Treaty of Ghent of 1814 with Great Britain

Theodore Lyman (Jr.) - 1828 - 542 pages
...contained a recognition of American independence, it could not be abrogated by a subsequent war bet ween the parties. To a position of this novel nature Great...parties ; — she cannot, therefore, consent to give to her diplomatic relations with one state a different degree of permanency from that, on which her...
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Treaty of Ghent of 1814 with Great Britain

Theodore Lyman (Jr.) - 1828 - 550 pages
...position of this novel nature Great Britain cannot accede. She knows of no exception to the rule, that nil treaties are put an end to by a subsequent war between...parties ; — she cannot, therefore, consent to give to her diplomatic relations with one state a different degree of permanency from that, on which her...
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The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States: With an ...

United States. Congress - 1855 - 726 pages
...Mississippi, and a small part of the article concerning the fisheries. The position that "Great Britain knows of no exception to the rule that all treaties...are put an end to by a subsequent war between the sune parties," appears to the undersigned not only novel, but unwarranted by any of the received authorities...
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The History of Oregon and California & the Other Territories of the ...

Robert Greenhow - 1844 - 516 pages
...war between the parties. To a position of this novel nature Great Britain cannot accede. She Icnows of no exception to the rule, that all treaties are...same parties : she cannot, therefore, consent to give to her diplomatic relations with one state a different degree of permanency from that on which her...
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The Congressional Globe, Volume 14

United States. Congress - 1844 - 440 pages
...the same purpose, and which were suspended by the war of 1&12, Lord Bathhurst replied: "She (England) knows of no exception to the rule that all treaties...to by a subsequent war between the same parties." In the year 1796, hostilities began between Spain and Great Britain, by a declaration made by Spain,...
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The History of Oregon and California, and the Other Territories of the North ...

Robert Greenhow - 1845 - 456 pages
...his lordship, " on the part of the United States, that the treaty of 1783 was of a peculiar nature, and that, because it contained a recognition /- of...same parties : she cannot, therefore, consent to give to her diplomatic relations with one state a different degree of permanency from that on which her...
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The United States Democratic Review, Volume 16

1845 - 648 pages
...coasts of Newfoundland was annulled by the war of 1812, taking occasion at the same time to declare that she " knows of no exception to the rule, that all...to, by a subsequent war between the same parties."* It has been said indeed on the part of the British government that the engagements of this treaty,...
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Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 8

Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell - 1845 - 558 pages
...subsisting treaties. We have it in the language of the British diplomatists of 1815: "Great Britain knows of no exception to the rule, that all treaties...to by a subsequent war between the same parties." * The only exveption, however, is in cases of "transitory conventions", of which the Nootka Sound treaty...
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The History of Oregon and California, and the Other Territories of the North ...

Robert Greenhow - 1845 - 538 pages
...thus made to rest, in 1827, without directly impugning its own declaration that " Great Britain knows no exception to the rule that all treaties are put...end to by a subsequent war between the same parties ;" as well as the legality of its present occupation of the Falkland Islands, from which the British...
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