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Furthermore, the prisoners being taken for exchange were under an obligation not to engage in hostilities towards their captors. If they were to capture the cartel ship, they would have no rights to salvage, and the owner of the vessel, if it were a ship from their country, would have no right to reclaim the vessel.
124:
s prisoners from three earlier captures on board and then sending her and her now 79 passengers and crew into
Falmouth under the command of an American officer. There the British government refused to recognize the cartel agreement that Blewett, his crew, and passengers had signed. Rather than turn
77:
A ship serving as a cartel was not subject to seizure or capture. However, if it engaged in commerce or warlike acts such as carrying official dispatches or messengers, it lost its character of inviolability and would then be subject to capture. The cartel protection extended to the return voyage.
158:
151:
ferried 4,000 Argentinian prisoners of war from the islands to Puerto Madryn, Argentina, from East
Falkland after the cessation of hostilities, and was appointed a cartel ship by the
70:. Traditionally, they were unarmed but for a single gun retained for signalling purposes. Cartel ships were used on the basis of intergovernmental agreements, which were called '
66:, are ships employed on humanitarian voyages, in particular, to carry communications or prisoners between belligerents. They fly distinctive flags, including a
129:
over to the Agent for
American Prisoners, the British government instructed Blewett to resume command of his ship and prepare her to sail again.
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wrote to the United States
Government that Great Britain would not accept as valid cartel agreements made on the high seas. On 10 June 1813,
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The law of nations affecting commerce during war: with a review of the jurisdiction, practice and proceedings of prize courts
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The last known modern day use of the title "cartel ship" refers to the
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55:, which was used by the British navy at the time. June 27th 1855.
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representative Hugo
Berchtold, then present in the islands.
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147:. Known colloquially as "The Great White Whale",
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226:https://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/xf-crtl.html
20:Two cartel boats meet to transfer the sword of
224:Cartel flags, Joe McMillan, 14 December 2001,
143:cruise liner that the UK used in 1982 in the
254:The Naval War of 1812: A Documentary History
166:cartel ship steaming to collect prisoners.
273:International law with illustrative cases
74:' between the 17th and the 19th century.
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96:captured the outward-bound Falmouth
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170:flies her own colours astern, her
32:forward. The Russian boat (tossed
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315:
252:Dudley, William S., ed. (1985).
109:could send a prize crew aboard.
36:, left), additionally flies the
256:. Government Printing Office.
218:
1:
280:Upton, Francis Henry (1863).
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182:
7:
10:
320:
275:. F.H. Thomas Law Book Co.
40:astern. The British boat (
38:Ensign of the Russian Navy
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56:
271:Maxey, Edwin (1906).
174:aloft, and the white
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51:), flies the British
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239:, pp. 157–9.
215:, pp. 25–27.
117:, putting all of
113:made a cartel of
87:British Admiralty
64:international law
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284:. J.S. Voorhies.
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26:a recent battle
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299:Law of the sea
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263:978-0945274063
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48:St Jean d'Acre
44:, right, from
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304:Prize warfare
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30:flag of truce
28:. Both fly a
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213:Upton (1863)
198:Maxey (1906)
172:enemy's flag
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60:Cartel ships
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164:Confederate
83:War of 1812
81:During the
293:Categories
246:References
53:Red Ensign
24:killed in
22:an officer
183:Citations
153:Red Cross
119:President
111:President
107:President
93:President
46:HMS
178:forward.
168:The ship
149:Canberra
136:Canberra
134:SS
141:P&O
72:cartels
260:
98:packet
122:'
62:, in
258:ISBN
91:USS
85:the
42:sail
34:oars
295::
205:^
190:^
162:A
266:.
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