The Laws of War, Affecting Commerce and Shipping

audiobook

The Laws of War, Affecting Commerce and Shipping

by H. Byerley (Henry Byerley) Thomson

EN·~3 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total

THE LAWS OF WAR, AFFECTING COMMERCE AND SHIPPING

0:03

H. BYERLEY THOMSON, ESQ., B.A.

17:34

PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.

1:13

THE LAWS OF WAR. - PART I. - THE LAWS OF WAR AFFECTING COMMERCE AND SHIPPING. - CHAPTER I. COMMENCEMENT OF WAR. - SECTION I.

33:05

SECTION II.

17:08

CHAPTER II. - SECTION I.

1:04:03

CHAPTER III. - SECTION I.

47:30

APPENDIX TO PART I.

13:35

INDEX.

0:02

POSTSCRIPT.

14:47

Description

A clear‑handed guide to the legal landscape of war‑time trade, this treatise opens by explaining why ordinary merchants need a reliable compass when conflict threatens the seas. It traces the origins of the “law of nations” and shows how, despite the absence of a global legislature, maritime courts have become the de facto arbiters of international conduct. The author’s concise style makes complex principles—such as the limits on blockades, the rights of neutral vessels, and the treatment of captured cargo—accessible to anyone with a stake in shipping.

The work emphasizes the impartial duty of Admiralty judges, drawing on historic opinions that stress fairness across borders, whether the case is heard in London, Stockholm or any other port. By grounding modern practice in well‑established decisions, it offers both a practical handbook for today’s traders and a window into the legal thinking of the mid‑nineteenth century. An expanded introduction, fresh topics, and a handy index round out this edition, while a promised second part will later explore the laws governing armies, navies, and militias.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (213K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-10-25

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HB

H. Byerley (Henry Byerley) Thomson

1822–1867

Best known for writing on the laws of war and colonial law, this nineteenth-century barrister brought a practical legal mind to subjects that still feel strikingly modern. His work connects Victorian Britain, maritime conflict, and the legal world of Ceylon.

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