Part 61 (1/2)

Fis.h.i.+ng vessels, exemption of, from capture, 246.

Flags of truce, use of, 253, 264, 265, 267-269, 272.

Foraging, when may be resorted to, 243.

Forbidden methods in war, 252-254.

Foreign-born subjects, jurisdiction over, 122.

Foreign Enlistment Act of Great Britain, 283.

France, recognition of republic of, 45-47; relation of, to balance of power, 83; one of the Great Powers, 90; friends.h.i.+p of, with Russia, 93; sale of territory to, by Monaco, 101; by Sweden, 101; part.i.tion of Africa by, 103; jurisdiction of, over certain gulfs, 108; treaty of, with England as to enclosed waters, 108; convention of, as to the Suez Ca.n.a.l, 111; jurisdiction over foreign merchantmen within her ports, 120, 121; as to foreign-born subjects, 122-124; marriage, 125; naturalization, 127; sale of forests of, by Prussians, 261; termination of wars of, 271; relations of, to neutrality and neutralization, 278, 279; citizens of, on expedition during Franco-German War, 289; views of, as to horses as contraband, 305.

”Free s.h.i.+ps, free goods,” doctrine of, 247, 278, 300-303.

Gallatin, Minister, liability of servant of, to local jurisdiction, 180.

Garfield, President, testimony of foreign minister at trial of a.s.sa.s.sin of, 179.

Genet, M., action of, as to privateers in the United States, 282; consular prize courts of, 325.

Geneva Arbitration, treaty as to, 204; the Alabama case at the, 297.

Geneva Convention, as laying down new rules, 32; sick and wounded under, 264, 280; provisions of, 395-399.

Germany, recognition of, 44; one of the Great Powers, 90; a party to the Triple Alliance, 92; part.i.tion of Africa by, 103; convention of, as to the Suez Ca.n.a.l, 111; jurisdiction of, over foreign-born subjects, 123, 124; citizens of, in China, 131; volunteer navy of, 255; sale of French forests by, 261; application of, to transport wounded across Belgium, 287; law of, as to prize money, 327.

Gift, as a means of acquiring territory, 100.

Good offices, settlement of disputes by resorting to, 218.

Government of armies of United States, 331-365.

Grant, President, recognition of France by, 45; proclamation of, as to belligerent vessels leaving United States ports, 291, 292.

Great Britain, diplomatic papers of, 34; protectorates of, 52, 53; power of, over various companies, 54, 55; recognition of belligerency by, 60; relations of, to treaty of Utrecht, 76; difference of, with Venezuela, 78; intervention of, in affairs of Denmark, 80; relation of, to balance of power, 83; one of the Great Powers, 90; att.i.tude of, at the congress of Troppau, 90; Verona, 91; cession of Horse-shoe Reef by, to United States, 100; sale of territory to, by Netherlands, 101; part.i.tion of Africa by, 103; treaty of, with France as to enclosed waters, 108; convention of, as to the Suez Ca.n.a.l, 111; att.i.tude of, as to the three-mile limit, 112-114; treaties of, as to Canadian fisheries, 114-116; Bering Sea, 116, 117; territorial waters jurisdiction act of, 120; jurisdiction of, over foreign-born subjects, 123; att.i.tude of, as to naturalization, 127; jurisdiction of, over aliens, 131; immunities of diplomatic agents of, 180 _et seq._; protectorate of, over Ionian Islands, 214; war of, with the Transvaal, 230; volunteer navy of, 256; guaranty of, as to Suez Ca.n.a.l, 280; neutrality laws of, 283; att.i.tude of, as to, Terceira affair, 288; Alabama case, 297; contraband, 307; convoy, 313; blockade, 319, 320; continuous voyages, 320-324; law of, as to prize money, 327.

Great Powers, enumeration of, 90; policy of, 90-93.

Greece, in early international law, 13; recognition of, 44; intervention in affairs of, 84, 211; att.i.tude of Great Powers as to, 91, 92, 279; recall of citizens by, 130; pacific blockade of, 223; volunteer navy of, 256.

Guaranty, treaties of, 211; as to ca.n.a.ls, 279, 280.

Guerrilla troops, status of, 236.

Guidon de la Mar. _See_ Sea Laws.

Gulfs, as affecting jurisdiction, 108.