Online Encyclopedia

FREE PORTS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 86 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
FREE PORTS  , a
See also:
term, strictly speaking, given to localities where no customs duties are levied, and where no customs super-vision exists . In these ports (subject to payment for specific services rendered, wharfage, storage, &c., and to the observance of
See also:
local police and sanitary regulations)
See also:
ships load and unload,. cargoes are deposited and handled,
See also:
industries are exercised, manufactures are carried on, goods are bought and sold, without any
See also:
action on the
See also:
part of fiscal authorities . Ports are likewise designated "
See also:
free " where a space or zone exists within which commercial operations are conducted without payment of import or export duty, and without active interference on the part of customs authorities . The French and German designations for these two descriptions of ports are—for the former La Ville franche, Freih...fen; for the latter Le
See also:
Port
See also:
franc, Freibezirk or Freilager . The
See also:
English phrase free port applies to both.' The leading conditions under which free ports in
See also:
Europe derived their origin were as follows:—(1) When public order became re-established during the
See also:
middle ages, trading centres were gradually formed: Marts for the
See also:
exchange and
See also:
purchase of goods arose in different localities . Many
See also:
Italian settlements, constituting free zones, were established in the
See also:
Levant . The Hanseatic towns arose in the 12th century .
See also:
Great fairs became recognized—the
See also:
Leipzig charter was granted in 1268 . These localities were free as regards customs duties, although dues of the nature of octroi charges were often levied . (2) Until the 19th century
See also:
European states were numerous, and often of small
See also:
size . Accordingly
See also:
uniform customs tariffs of wide application did not exist . i In
See also:
China at the
See also:
present time (1902) certain ports are designated " free and open." This phrase means that the ports in question are (t) open to
See also:
foreign trade, and (2) that vessels engaged in oversea voyages may freely resort there .

Exemption from payment of customs duties is not implied, which is a

See also:
matter distinct from the permission granted under treaty engagements to foreign vessels to carry cargoes to and from the " treaty ports." Uniform rates of duty were fixed in England by the Subsidy Act of 166o . In France, before the Revolution (besides the free ports), Alsace and the
See also:
Lorraine Bishoprics were in trade matters treated as foreign countries . The unification of the German customs tariff began in 1834 with the Steuerverein and the Zollverein . The
See also:
Spanish fiscal
See also:
system did not include the Basque provinces until about 185o . The uniform Italian tariff
See also:
dates from 1861 . Thus until very
See also:
recent times on the Continent free ports were compatible with the fiscal policy and practice of different countries . (3) Along the Mediterranean coast, up to the 19th century, convenient shelter was needed from corsairs . In other
See also:
continental countries the prevalent colonial and mercantile policy sought to create trans-oceanic trade . Free ports were advantageous from all these points of view . In following the
See also:
history of these harbours in Europe, it is to be observed that in Great Britain free ports have never existed . In 1552 it was contemplated to place Hull and Southampton on this footing, but the design was abandoned . Subsequently the bonding and not the free port system was adopted in the
See also:
United
See also:
Kingdom .

Austria-Hungary.—Fiume and Trieste were respectively free ports during the periods 1722–1893 and 1719–1893 . Belgium.—The emperor Joseph II. during his visit to the
See also:
Austrian
See also:
Netherlands in
See also:
June 1781 endeavoured to create a
See also:
direct trade between that country and India . Ostend was made a free port, and large bonding facilities were afforded at Brines, Brussels, Ghent and Louvain . In 1796, however, the revolutionary government abolished the Ostend privileges . Denmark.—In November 1894 an
See also:
area of about 15o acres at Copenhagen was opened as a free port, and great facilities are afforded for
See also:
shipping and commercial operations in order that the Baltic trade may centre there . France.—Marseilles was a free port in the middle ages, and so was Dunkirk when it formed part of Flanders . In 1669 these privileges were confirmed, and extended to
See also:
Bayonne . In 1784 there was a fresh confirmation, and
See also:
Lorient and St
See also:
Jean de Luz were included in the ordonnance . The
See also:
National Assembly in 1790 maintained this policy, and created free ports in the French West Indies . In 1795, however, all such privileges were abolished, but large bonding facilities were allowed at
See also:
Marseilles to favour the Levant trade . The government of Louis XVIII. in 1814 restored, and in 1871 again revoked, the free port privileges of Marseilles . There are now no free ports in France or in French possessions; the bonding system is in force .

Germany.—Bremen,
See also:
Hamburg and
See also:
Lubeck were reconstituted free towns and ports under the
See also:
treaties of 1814–1815 . Certain minor ports, and several landing-stages on the Rhine and the
See also:
Neckar, were also designated free . As the Zollverein policy became accepted throughout Germany, previous privileges were gradually lessened, and since 1888 only Hamburg remains a free port . There an area of about 2500 acres is exempt from customs duties and control, and is largely used for shipping and commercial purposes . Bremer-haven has a similar area of nearly 700 acres .
See also:
Brake,
See also:
Bremen, Cuxhaven,
See also:
Emden, Geestemunde, Neufahrwasser and
See also:
Stettin possess Freibezirke areas, portions of the larger port . Heligoland is outside the Zollverein—practically a foreign country . In Italy free ports were numerous and important, and possessed privileges which varied at different dates . They were—Ancona, during the period 1696–1868; Brindisi, 1845–1862; Leghorn (in the 17th and 18th centuries a very important Mediterranean harbour), 1675–1867;
See also:
Messina, 1695–1879_ Senigallia, 1821–1868, during the month of the local
See also:
fair . Venice possessed warehouses,
See also:
equivalent to bonded stores, for German and
See also:
Turkish trade during the Republic, and was a free port 1851–1873 . Genoa was a free port in the titne of the Republic and under the French
See also:
Empire, and was continued as such by the treaties of 1814–1815 . The free port was, however, changed into a " deposito franco " by a law passed in 1865, and only storing privileges now remain .

Rumania.—Braila, Galati and Kustenji were free ports (for a period of about
See also:
forty years) up to 1883, when bonded warehouses were established by the Rumanian government .
See also:
Sulina remains free . Russia.—Archangel was a free port, at least for English goods, from 1553 to 1648 . During this period English products were admitted into Russia via Archangel without any customs payment for
See also:
internal consumption, and also in transit to
See also:
Persia . The
See also:
tsar Alexis revoked this grant on the execution of Charles I . Free ports were opened in 1895 at
See also:
Kola, in
See also:
Russian Lapland . Dalny, adjoining Port Arthur, was a free port during the Russian occupation; and
See also:
Japan after the war decided to renew this
See also:
privilege as soon as practicable . The number of free ports outside Europe has also lessened . The administrative policy of European countries has been gradually adopted in other parts of the
See also:
world, and customs duties have become almost universal, conjoined with bonding and transhipment facilities . In
See also:
British colonies and possessions, under an act of parliament passed in 1766, and repealed in 1867, two ports in
See also:
Dominica and four in
See also:
Jamaica were free, Malacca, Penang and Singapore have beenfree ports since 1824, Hong-
See also:
Kong since 1842, and Weihaiwei since it was leased to Great Britain in 1898 .
See also:
Zanzibar was a free port during 1892–1899 .
See also:
Aden,
See also:
Gibraltar, St Helena and St Thomas (West Indies) are sometimes designated free ports .

A few duties are, however, levied, which are really octroi rather than customs charges . These places are mainly stations for coaling and awaiting orders . Some harbours in the Netherlands

East Indies were free ports between 1829 and 1899 ; but these privileges were withdrawn by
See also:
laws passed in 1898–1899, in order to establish uniformity of customs administration . Harbours where custom houses are not maintained will be practically closed to foreign trade, though the governor-general may in
See also:
special circumstances vary the application of the new regulations . Macao has been a free port since 1845 .
See also:
Portugal has no other harbour of this character . The
See also:
American Republics have adopted the bonding system . In 1896 a free
See also:
wharf was opened at New Orleans in imitation of the recent European plan . Livingstone (Guatemala) was a free port during the period 1882-1888 . The privileges enjoyed under the old free port system benefited the towns and districts where they existed; and their abolition has been, locally, injurious . These places were, however, " foreign " to their own country, and their inland intercourse was restricted by the duties levied on their products, and by the precautions adopted to prevent evasion of these charges . With fiscal usages involving preferential and deferential treatment of goods and places, the drawbacks thus arising did not attract serious attention .

Under the limited means of communication within and beyond the country, in former times, these conveniences were not much

felt . But when
See also:
finance departments became more completely organized, the free port system fell out of favour with fiscal authorities: it afforded opportunities for
See also:
smuggling, and impeded uniformity of action and practice . It became, in fact, out of harmony with the administrative and
See also:
financial policy of later times . Bonding and entrepot facilities, on a scale commensurate with local needs, now satisfy trade requirements . In countries where high customs duties are levied, and where fiscal regulations are minute and rigid, if an extension of foreign trade is desired, and the competition which it involves is a national aim, special facilities must be granted for this purpose . In these circumstances a free zone sufficiently large to admit of commercial operations and transhipments on a scale which will fulfil these conditions (watched but not interfered with by the customs) becomes indispensable . The German government have, as we have seen, maintained a free zone of this nature at Hamburg . And when the free port at Copenhagen was opened,
See also:
counter
See also:
measures were adopted at Danzig and Stettin . An agitation has arisen in France to provide at certain ports free zones similar to those at Copenhagen and Hamburg, and to open free ports in French possessions . A
See also:
bill to this effect was submitted to the chamber of deputies on the 12th of
See also:
April 1905 . Colonial. free ports, such as Hong-Kong and Singapore, do not interfere with the uniformity of the home customs and excise policy . These two harbours in particular have become great shipping resorts and distributing centres .

The policy which led to their

establishment as free ports has certainly promoted British commercial interests . See the
See also:
Parliamentary Paper on " Continental Free Ports," 1904 . (C . M . K .

End of Article: FREE PORTS
[back]
FREE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND
[next]
FREE REED VIBRATOR (Fr. anche libre, Ger. durchschl...

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.