.MTA2MA.NzE2NDI: Difference between revisions

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unequivocal act of soveriegnty over the limits just mentioned. The juridictions of a State has terminated & must terminate [[unclear]] where the settlements or habitations of its subjects [[extend?]]. Anterior to the Revolutionary war, the limits of Georgia were of scarcely half as long as they are now, notwithstanding the extensive [[map?]] of the Royal Charter, capable only of witnessing the folly that characterized the administration of Great Britain, which at length effected the separation of its transatlantic provinces from their political [[unclear]] with the Mother Country.
unequivocal act of soveriegnty over the limits just mentioned. The juridictions of a State has terminated & must terminate [[unclear]] where the settlements or habitations of its subjects [[extend?]]. Anterior to the Revolutionary war, the limits of Georgia were of scarcely half as long as they are now, notwithstanding the extensive [[map?]] of the Royal Charter, capable only of witnessing the folly that characterized the administration of Great Britain, which at length effected the separation of its transatlantic provinces from their political [[unclear]] with the Mother Country.


"In the exercise," say the committee, "both of dominion & empire on the part of Great Britain,
"In the exercise," say the committee, "both of domain & empire on the part of Great Britain, certain portions of territory were reserved to the use of the Indians & the Indians themselves were declared to be under the protection of Great Britain, and the [[unclear]] reserved were declared to be under the sove-

Revision as of 01:58, 19 June 2020

(21.) unequivocal act of soveriegnty over the limits just mentioned. The juridictions of a State has terminated & must terminate unclear where the settlements or habitations of its subjects extend?. Anterior to the Revolutionary war, the limits of Georgia were of scarcely half as long as they are now, notwithstanding the extensive map? of the Royal Charter, capable only of witnessing the folly that characterized the administration of Great Britain, which at length effected the separation of its transatlantic provinces from their political unclear with the Mother Country.

"In the exercise," say the committee, "both of domain & empire on the part of Great Britain, certain portions of territory were reserved to the use of the Indians & the Indians themselves were declared to be under the protection of Great Britain, and the unclear reserved were declared to be under the sove-