| Basil Hall - 1824 - 492 pages
...years. The most admirable regulations were afterwards established respecting the prisons of Lima.* The commercial system was in strict character with...only for the benefit of the mother country, was acted * The article entitled " Sobre Caracles," in the Bibliotica Ameicana, is well worthy of the attention... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1824 - 616 pages
...the production of such commodities in the colonies as they imagined would rival their own ; and ir the old principle that ' the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother-country,' was not acted up to as extensively by others as by the Spaniards, we must make some... | |
| 1824 - 612 pages
...production of such commodities in the colonies as they imagined would rival their own ; and if I he old principle that ' the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother-country,' was not acted up to as extensively by others as by the Spaniards, we must make some... | |
| Basil Hall - 1825 - 408 pages
...years. The most admirable regulations were afterwards established respecting the prisons of Lima.* The commercial system was in strict character with...neither supplied themselves with any article which * The article entitled " Sobre Carceles," in the Biblioteca Americana, is well worthy of the attention... | |
| Josiah Conder - 1830 - 380 pages
...discourage the production of such commodities in the colonies as they imagined would rival their own. And if the old principle, that ' the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother country,' was not acted up to as extensively by others as by the Spaniards, we must make some allowance for those... | |
| Elroy McKendree Avery - 1905 - 536 pages
...that "the rules as to the enumerated articles were the 1663 first definite statement of the theory that the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother country." The idea, sanctioned by the English common law, that the colonists were merely Englishmen beyond the... | |
| Franciscan Sisters of the Perpetual Adoration (La Crosse, Wis.) - 1914 - 720 pages
...War for Independence, may be briefly summed up as follows: the remote cause was England's attitude that the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother country, which led to the enactment of the Navigation Acts and other laws restricting trade and manufacture.... | |
| 1911 - 696 pages
...eighteenth century so as to be able to understand the reasons for the acts of the British government. 2. (a) That the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother country; (b) that the colonies were dependent on the mother country and were founded for the purpose of carrying... | |
| Lady Maria Callcott - 2003 - 364 pages
...discourage the production of such commodities in the colonies as they imagined would rival their own; and if the old principle that 'the colonies existed only for the benefit of the mother-country,' was not acted up to as extensively by others as by the Spaniards, we must make some... | |
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