Grande-Bretagne -- Politique commerciale
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Grande-Bretagne -- Politique commerciale
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Grande-Bretagne
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- Subject of42
- An act to amend and continue several laws relating to the allowing the importation of rape seed ..., to the allowing the importation of seal skins cured with foreign salt, free of duty ..., and to the encouragement of the Greenland whale fisheries ..., and to continue several laws relating to the allowing the use of salt, duty free, in the preserving of fish ... and to the discontinuing the bounty payable on white herrings exported ..., and to the admission to entry of oil and blubber of Newfoundland ...
- Anno Regni Georgii III. Regis Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ, quarto, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the nineteenth day of May, Anno Dom. 1761, in the first year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c., and from thence continued by several prorogations to the fifteenth day of November, 1763, being the third session of the twelfth parliament of Great Britain
- Anno Regni Georgii III. Regis Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, & Hiberniae, tricesimo quarto, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the twenty-fifth day of November anno Domini 1790, in the thirty-first year of the reign of Our Sovereign Lord George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c., and from thence continued, by several prorogations, to the twenty-first day of January 1794, being the fourth session of the seventeenth Parliament of Great Britain
- Canada and the Empire, by A.E. De St. Dalmas ; introduction by Chancellor Wallace, commendatory letters by G.W. Ross and Lieut.-Col. Denison
- Correspondence between the Governor-General of Canada and the secretary of state for the Colonial Department upon the operation of the navigation laws, in continuation of the papers presented to both Houses of Parliament by command, July 1848
- An act for making perpetual and amending several laws for encouraging the making of sail cloth in Great Britain, and securing the duties on foreign sail cloth imported, and for making perpetual several laws for permitting the exportation of a certain quantity of corn and grain to Guernsey, Jersey, and Alderney, and for regulating the fees of officers of the customs, and of naval officers in the British colonies in America, and of the officers of the customs in Newfoundland
- An act to make perpetual an act of the fifty-eighth year of His late Majesty, to allow the importation into certain ports in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, of certain enumerated articles, and the re-exportation thereof from such ports
- A summary view of the statistics and existing commerce of the principal shores of the Pacific Ocean, with a sketch of the advantages, political and commercial, which would result from the establishment of a central free port within its limits; and also of one in the southern Atlantic, viz. within the territory of the Cape of Good Hope, conferring on the last, in particular, the same privileges of free trade with India and the northern Atlantic, bestowed lately on Malta and Gibraltar, by Alexander M'Konochie, Esq., commander, Royal Navy
- An act to continue several laws relating to permitting the importation of tobacco into Great Britain from any place whatever, and to permitting goods and commodities to be imported into and exported from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick in any ship or vessel, until the twenty-fifth day of March one thousand eight hundred and fifteen and to the amending an Act for consolidating and extending the several laws in force for allowing the importation of certain goods and merchandize into and from certain ports in the West Indies, until the twenty-fifth day of March one thousand eight hundred and fourteen
- An act to regulate the trade between His Majesty's possessions in America and the West Indies and other places in America and the West Indies, 24th June 1822
- An Examination of the commercial principles of the late negotiation between Great Britain and France in MDCCLXI, in which the system of that negotiation with regard to our colonies and commerce is considered
- An act to allow for three years, and until six weeks after the commencement of the then next session of Parliament, the importation into ports specially appointed by His Majesty, within the provinces of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, of the articles therein enumerated, and the re-exportation thereof from such ports
- Anno Regni Georgii III. Regis Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ, vicesino, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the twenty-ninth day of November, Anno domini 1774, in the fifteenth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, defender of the faith, &c., and from thence continued, by several prorogations, to the twenty-fifth day of November, 1779, being the sixth session of the fourteenth Parliament of Great Britain
- Field and factory side by side, or, How to establish and develope [sic] native industries, by J. Beaufort Hurlbert
- Anno Regni Georgii III Regis Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ, nono, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the tenth day of May, anno dom. 1768, in the eighth year of the reign of Our Sovereign Lord George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, &c., and from thence continued, by several prorogations, to the eighth day of November, 1768, being the second session of the thirteenth Parliament of Great Britain
- An act for the better protection of the trade of the United Kingdom during the present hostilities with France (24 June 1803)
- Sketch of the rise and fall of the manufacturing system of Great Britain, in which are shown the mischievous effects of our present restrictive laws; and the beneficial results that would accrue from a free trade
- Observations on the report of the Select Committee of the House of Lords, relative to the timber trade, by a British merchant [id est Simon Cook]
- An act to authorize His Majesty to permit, until the twenty-fifth day of March one thousand eight hundred and twelve, any goods and commodities to be imported into and exported from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, in any ship or vessel whatsoever
- Deputation to the Right Hon. the Earl of Kimberley and the Right Hon. the Marquis of Hartington from the British and Inter-Colonial Trade Tariff Union :, on the subject of British and inter-colonial tariffs
- An act to continue until the twenty-fifth day of March one thousand eight hundred and ten, several laws relating to the encouragement of the Greenland whale fisheries, to the admission to entry in Great Britain of oil and blubber of Newfoundland taken by His Majesty's subjects carrying on the fishery from and residing in the said Island, and to the allowing the importation of fish from Newfoundland and the coast of Labrador
- Thoughts on the late proceedings of government respecting the trade of the West India islands with the United States of North America, by Brian Edwards, Esq
- Observations on the report of the Select Committee of the House of Lords, relative to the timber trade, by a British merchant
- Remarks on the consequences of the entire change of our colonial policy in British North America
- A second letter to the Right Hon. W. Huskisson on the effects of free trade on our shipping, colonies and commerce, by S. Atkinson
- Anno Regni Georgii III. Regis Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ, vicesimo sexto, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, the eighteenth day of May Anno Domini 1784, in the twenty-fourth year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third ...and from thence continued, by several prorogations, to the twenty-fourth day of January, 1786, being the third session of the sixteenth Parliament of Great Britain
- Further correspondence between the Governor-General of Canada and the secretary of state for the Colonial Department, upon the operation of the navigation laws, in continuation of the papers presented to both Houses of Parliament by command, July 1848, and February and 2nd March 1849
- England's free trade, by John Mothersill
- A summary view of the statistics and existing commerce of the principal shores of the Pacific Ocean, with a sketch of the advantages, political and commercial, which would result from the establishment of a central free port within its limits : and also of one in the southern Atlantic, viz. within the territory of the Cape of Good Hope, conferring on this latter, in particular, the same privilege of direct trade with India and the northern Atlantic, bestowed lately on Malta and Gibraltar, by Captain M'Konochie
- Anno quinto & sexto Victoriae Reginae Magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae, au parlement commencé et tenu à Westminster, le dix-neuvième jour d'août, anno domini 1841 ... et depuis lors continué par prorogations au 3e jour de février, 1842, étant la seconde session du quatorzième Parlement du Royaume Uni de la Grande Bretagne et d'Irlande
- An act to permit blubber from the Greenland fishery and Davis's Streights to be boiled into oil after the arrival of the ships from the fishery, and for charging the duty thereon; for altering the convoy duty now payable on the importation of opium ...
- Free trade and English commerce, by Augustus Mongredien
- An Examination of the commercial principles of the late negotiation between Great Britain and France in MDCCLXI, in which the system of that negotiation with regard to our colonies and commerce is considered
- An act to allow the importation of oranges and lemons from the Azores and the Madeiras into the British colonies in North America
- A letter from an American, now resident in London, to a member of Parliament, on the subject of the restraining proclamation, and containing strictures on Lord Sheffield's pamphlet on the commerce of the American states
- An Act to repeal the several laws relating to the customs
- Anno quinto & sexto Victoriae Reginae, Magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae, at the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster, on the nineteenth day of August ... 1841 ... and from thence continued by prorogations to the 3d day of February 1842 : being the second session of the fourteenth Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
- Field and factory side by side, or, How to establish and develope [sic] native industries, by J. Beaufort Hurlbert
- An act to regulate the trade of British possessions abroad
- An act for the better protection of the trade of the United Kingdom during the present hostilities with France (11 July 1815)
- Further correspondence between the Governor-General of Canada and the secretary of state for the Colonial Department upon the operation of the navigation laws, in continuation of the papers presented to both Houses of Parliament by command, July 1848, and February 1849
- An act for making perpetual several laws relating to permitting the exportation of tobacco pipe clay from Great Britain to the British sugar colonies in the West Indies, the importation of salt from Europe into Quebec in America, and the prohibiting of foreign-wrought silks and velvets
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