Law of Nations, Or, Principles of the Law of Nature: Applied to the Conduct and Affairs of Nations and Sovereigns ; from the French of Monsieur de Vattel ; from the New Edition

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T. & J. W. Johnson & Company, 1866 - 656 sivua
 

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Right of the princes and states of the empire in that respect
59
Renunciations
62
Necessity of the observance of justice in human society
63
What is allowable in that respect in time of war
64
Of Nations or Sovereign States
65
The minister of a friendly power is to be received 456
66
Admission of an enemys ministers 457
68
The right of punishing injustice
69
Sect
72
Of the state and of sovereignty
74
power
75
for the distribution of land
78
The property of the citizens is the national property with respect
81
Utility of domestic trade
84
Ambassadors going to an enemys country
85
Sect Page 85 Alliances made with a nation actually engaged in war 325
86
Duty of the nation in that respect
87
To refuse succours for an unjust war is no breach of alliance 326
88
It never takes place in an unjust war
89
Prohibition of foreign merchandises
90
and in a treaty of a guaranty
91
The succour is not due under an inability to furnish it or when the public safety would be exposed
92
Violation of territory
93
two of the parties in an alliance coming to a rupture 327
94
Imprescriptibility of rights founded on treaty
96
and those who assist him without being obliged to it by treaties
97
States called patrimonial
98
or who are in an offensive alliance with him 329
99
Another case
100
Its right in that respect
102
Agreement of nations concerning the privileges of ambassadors
103
Neutral nations 332
104
Establishment of money
105
An ally may furnish the succour due from him and remain neuter 333
106
Treaties of neutrality
107
Additional reasons for making those treaties 334
109
How levies may be allowed money lent and every kind of things sold without a breach of neutrality
110
Instruction
111
Examples
124
Duties and rights of the sovereign with respect to religion
132
Nature of that authority
142
Sect
143
Sect Page 24 Right of trading belonging to nations
144
Each nation is sole judge of the propriety of commerce on her own part ib 26 Necessity of commercial treaties
145
General rule concerning those treaties ib 28 Duty of nations in making such treaties ib 29 Perpetual or temporary treaties or treaties revocable at plea...
146
A nation may restrict her commerce in favour of another nation ib 33 A nation may appropriate to herself a particular branch of trade
147
Dignity of nations or sovereign states
149
Their equality ib 37 Precedency ib 38 The form of government is foreign to this question
150
Treaties and established customs are to be observed in that respect ib 41 Name and honours given by the nation to her conductor
151
Whether a sovereign may assume what title and honours he pleases
152
Right of other nations in that respect ib 44 Their duty ib 45 How titles and honours may be secured 153
153
We must conform to general custom ib 47 Mutual respect due by sovereigns to each other ib 48 How a sovereign ought to maintain his dignity
154
Extensive interpretation founded on the reason of the
155
Functions and duties of the prince in that respect
161
Booty
164
Demolition of fortresses
170
Right of pardoning
173
Entering the territory
175
Deputies to the states
185
65
191
CHAP XXI
193
Conditions on which a conquered town is acquired
199
Possession of a country by a nation
203
77
205
Shores and ports
208
The agreement called sponsio
209
What is our country
211
Children born in the armies of the state or in the house of its minister
217
Cases in which a citizen has a right to quit his country
223
CHAP II
224
CHAP VIII
227
The exile and the banished man have a right to live somewhere
229
What soldiers and subalterns may
231
Aggregate wealth of a nation and its divisions
235
CHAP IV
237
Right to security 154
238
It produces the right of resistance ib 51 and that of obtaining reparation 155
240
Right of opposing the interference of foreign powers in the affairs of government 157
241
Stipulation of a penalty against the infractor
243
Who is the judge of their disputes
247
A subject cannot refuse to be a hostage
252
Nobody has a right to appropriate to himself the use of the open
281
Prisoner retaken before he has paid his former ransom
283
Popular commotion insurrection sedition
289
Treaties of Peace
292
Sect Page 10 Whether there be any exemptions from carrying arms
294
The effects of civil war distinguished according to cases
295
Soldiers pay and quarters
296
202
297
Things favourable and things odious
300
Interpretation of favourable things
307
By whom it may be concluded
311
Second rule
313
Eighth rule
319
How nations may abandon their rights and just complaints
325
How we acquire a right of recurring to force in a doubtful case
333
Trade of neutral nations with those which are at war
335
Contraband goods
336
Whether such goods may be confiscated
337
Retaliation
339
CHAP XVII
341
The state is bound to compensate those who suffer by reprisals
345
276
377
BOOK IV
381
286
387
Duty of the inhabitants on a foreign armys entering a country before
390
Hospitals for invalids ib 13 Mercenary soldiers 297
399
Publication of the war and manifestoes
422
Right of making
423
How the sovereign may in a treaty dispose of what concerns individuals
435
Searching neutral ships 339
445
CHAP VIII
454
Women children the aged and sick
460
The state is bound to procure their release
466
CHAP IX
473
Of Faith between Enemiesof Stratagems Artifices in War Spies
481
Clandestine seduction of the enemys people
488
Things belonging to an enemy
495
CHAP XIV
498
Of the Right of Postliminium
505
239
521
The state has no right over the person of a foreigner
538
OF THE RESTORATION OF PEACE AND OF EMBASSIES
546
Foundation of that right
553
Whether a king who is a prisoner of war can make a peace
554
Amnesty
560
Of the several Orders of Public Ministersof the Representative Character and of the Honours due to Ministers 69 Origin of the several orders of publi...
577
Representative character ib 71 Ambassadors ib 72 Envoys 460
579
faction
584
The ambassador is exempt from the civil jurisdiction of the country
596
How he may voluntarily subject himself to
607
109
608
minister may carry
614
121
620
37
627
Contracts made by him with private persons in the name of the state
628
only by a few wandering tribes
629
Lands possessed by foreigners in an enemys country
631
Who are the heirs of a foreigner
632
Third Object of a good Governmentto fortify itself against External Attacks
633
243
634
Foundation of the common and mutual duties of nations
1
Authority of the body politic over the members
2
The sovereigns obligation in that respect
3
It belongs only to the sovereign power
4
Distinction to be made between evident and doubtful
5
Enemys property on board a neutral ship ib 116 Neutral property on board an enemys ship ib 117 Trade with a besieged town ib 118 Impartial offic...
5
What are the rights of which men cannot be deprived
5
Things not mentioned in the treaty
5
Definition of usucaption and prescription
5
44
6
Objects of his care and the means he ought to employ
The sea near the coasts may become property
When it commences 466
Of Treaties of Alliance and other Public Treaties
How inequality of treaties and alliances may be conformable to
Of the Interpretation of Treaties
Second rulenot to take advantage of the truce in doing what hos
CHAP II
Alone and of itself it cannot give a right to attack him 308
Of the Sovereign who wages an unjust

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