Online Encyclopedia

PRIVATEER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 370 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PRIVATEER  , an armed

vessel belonging to a private owner, commissioned by a belligerent state to carry on operations of war . The commission is known as letters of marque . Acceptance of such a commission by a
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British subject is forbidden by the
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Foreign Enlistment Act 1870 . Privateering is now a
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matter of much less importance than it formerly was, owing to the terms of
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art . 1 of the Declaration of Paris,
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April 16, 1856, " Privateering is and remains abolished." The declaration binds only the powers who are signatories or who afterwards assented, and those only when engaged in war with one another . The
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United States and Spain have not acceded to it, but though it did not hold as between them in the war of 1898, they both observed it . Privateers stand in a position between that of a public
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ship of war and a merchant vessel, and the raising of merchant vessels to the status of warships has in
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recent
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wars given rise to so much difficulty in distinguishing between volunteer war-
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ships and privateers that the subject was made one of those for settlement by the Second Hague
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Conference (1907) . The rules adopted are as follows: 1 . A merchant-ship converted into a war-ship cannot have the rights and duties appertaining to vessels having that status unless it is placed under the
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direct authority, immediate control and responsibility of the power the flag of which it flies . 2 . Merchant-ships converted into war-ships must bear the
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external marks which distinguish the war-ships of their
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nationality . 3 .

The

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commander must be in the service of the state and duly commissioned by the proper authorities . His name must figure on the list of the
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officers of the fighting
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fleet . 4 . The crew must be subject to military discipline . 5 . Every merchant-ship converted into a war-ship is bound to observe in its operations the
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laws and customs of war . 6 . A belligerent who converts a merchant-ship into a war-ship must, as soon as possible, announce such conversion in the list of its war-ships . In connexion with the conversion of the " Peterburg " and "
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Smolensk " on the high seas during the Russo-
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Japanese War, and the ruse by which they came through the Bosporus and the Dardanelles, it was agreed, after a vain attempt to solve the question in a way satisfactory to all parties, that the subject of whether the conversion may take place upon the high seas should remain outside the scope of the convention . (T .

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