Online Encyclopedia

CONVOY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 68 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

CONVOY  (through the Fr. from

See also:
late
See also:
Lat. conviare, to go along with, from Lat. cum, with, and via, way; " convey " has the same ultimate origin [see
See also:
CONVEYANCE], neither word being connected, as has sometimes been supposed, with Lat. convehere, to carry together), a verb and noun now almost exclusively used in military and
See also:
naval parlance . As a verb it signifies in the first instance to accompany or to escort; and in the 17th century we even hear of cavalry " convoying "
See also:
infantry, but its meaning was soon complicated by the growing use of the word " convey " in the sense of " to carry," and as the usual task of an escort was that of accompanying and protecting vehicles containing supplies, the noun " convoy " (Fr. convoi) was introduced and has thence-forward in
See also:
land warfare meant a train of vehicles containing stores for the use of troops and its guard or escort . Sometimes even the word is found in the meaning of the train of vehicles without implying that there is an escort, so far has the
See also:
original meaning become obscured; but the idea of military
See also:
protection is always
See also:
present, whether this protection is given by a
See also:
separate escort or provided by the weapons of the drivers themselves . In naval warfare the
See also:
term is used to describe a method adopted for defending merchant
See also:
ships against capture . It was usually applied to the vessels to be protected—as for example " the Baltic convoy," or " Captain Montray's convoy." Until the 17th century the
See also:
English term was " to waft " and the warship employed to guard the traders on their way was called " a wafter." The practice of sailing in convoy for mutual protection was
See also:
common in the
See also:
middle ages, when all ships were more or less armed and the war vessel was not entirely differentiated from the trader . Thus the ships of the
See also:
great German confederation of cities known as the Hanseatic
See also:
League were required to
See also:
sail in convoy . So were the six trading squadrons which sailed yearly from Venice . The masters of all the vessels were required to obey the authority of an officer who had the general command . In the 16th century the
See also:
Spanish trade with
See also:
America was compelled by law to sail in convoys (jlotas), in order to avoid the danger of capture by pirates to which single ships were exposed . In the 17th and 18th centuries the use of convoy was universal . Dutch, French or
See also:
British ships were collected at a
See also:
rendezvous, and were accompanied by warships till they reached the point at which they were compelled to separate in order to go to their various destinations . The main danger was near the enemy's ports .

An example of the way the

duty was discharged may be found in the
See also:
Newfoundland convoy . They sailed from England under the direction of a naval officer and the protection of his ships, commonly a
See also:
forty- or fifty-
See also:
gun
See also:
ship with a smaller vessel in attendance . The convoy sailed to the banks of Newfoundland . When they had filled up with stock fish, they were escorted across the
See also:
Atlantic by the same officer . He accompanied those of them bound to the Mediterranean to the
See also:
port of Leghorn, and, when they had unloaded and reloaded, saw them home . All cases were not so
See also:
simple . The ships engaged in the East and West India trade, for instance, sailed together . In the Channel they were protected by the main strength of the
See also:
fleet . When beyond the Scilly Islands they were
See also:
left to the care of a smaller force, and continued together till in the neighbour-hood of Madeira, when they separated . Convoys were subject to attack in two forms, by strong squadrons which overpowered the guard, and by privateers, corsairs and isolated cruisers . This latter peril was much increased in the case of British commerce by the reluctance of the merchant captains to obey the naval
See also:
officers . They were very much inclined to separate from the convoy as they approached their destination in the hope of
See also:
forestalling rivals .

As a natural consequence they were frequently captured by hostile privateers . French naval officers had authority and large

powers of punishment over merchant skippers . The British naval officers had not . In 1803-34, on the renewal of the war with France, the British government saw the necessity for regulating convoy more strictly than had hitherto been the case . It therefore passed " an act for the better protection of the trade of the
See also:
United
See also:
Kingdom during the present hostilities with France." By this act (the 43rd Geo . III . Cap . 57) all vessels not exempted by
See also:
special licence were required to sail in convoy and to conform to strict regulations, under penalties of £r000 (or, when the goods included government stores, of 1500) and the loss of all claim to
See also:
insurance in case of capture . (D . H.) The
See also:
object of convoying is to attach an official public character to the convoyed ships, i.e. a sort of assimilation of them to the escorting ship or ships of war . Thus
See also:
European states and jurists hold that the declaration of the
See also:
commander of the convoy, that there is no contraband of war on board the convoyed ships, pledges the
See also:
national good faith, and must be assumed to be correct in the same way as it is assumed that the convoy itself is carrying no contraband of war . Great Britain has never taken this view .

Down to 1907 she had maintained that it is materially impossible for any neutral

state to exercise the necessary super-vision to secure absolute accuracy of the ship's papers . Number 29, however, of the instructions given by the government to the British plenipotentiaries at the Hague
See also:
Conference of 1907 stated that " H.M. government would . . . be glad to see the right of search limited in every practicable way, e.g. by the adoption of a
See also:
system of consular certificates declaring the absence of contraband from the cargo . . . ." As the greater includes the smaller, we may assume that, if a consular certificate might suffice to exempt from the exercise of search, the state guarantee of a convoy would certainly suffice . The
See also:
London Convention on the
See also:
Laws and Customs of Naval War has laid down the rules as to convoys in the following terms: Neutral vessels under national convoy are exempt from search . The commander of a convoy gives, in writing, at the request of the commander of a belligerent warship, all information as to the character of the vessels and their cargoes, which could be obtained by search.—Art . 61 . If the commander of the belligerent warship has reason to suspect that the confidence of the commander of the convoy has been abused, he communicates his suspicions to him . In such a case it is for the commander of the convoy alone to investigate the
See also:
matter . He must record the result of such investigation in a report, of which a copy is handed to the officer of the warship . If, in the opinion of the commander of the convoy, the facts shown in the report justify the capture of one or more vessels, the protection of the convoy must be withdrawn from such vessels.—Art .

62 . (T .

End of Article: CONVOY
[back]
CONVOLVULACEAE
[next]
CONVULSIONS

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.