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T - Ups (Vol. 23)

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: T - Ups (Vol. 23)

Monograph

Persistent identifier:
856490555
Author:
Fras, Mojca Kosmatin
Title:
International cooperation and technology transfer
Sub title:
Ljubljana, Slovenia, February 2 - 5, 2000 : proceedings of the workshop
Scope:
VI, 163 Seiten
Year of publication:
2000
Place of publication:
London
Publisher of the original:
RICS Books
Identifier (digital):
856490555
Illustration:
Illustrationen, Diagramme
Language:
English
Usage licence:
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Publisher of the digital copy:
Technische Informationsbibliothek Hannover
Place of publication of the digital copy:
Hannover
Year of publication of the original:
2016
Document type:
Monograph
Collection:
Earth sciences

Chapter

Title:
FOREST BORDER IDENTIFICATION BY RULE-BASED CLASSIFICATION OF LANDSAT TM AND GIS DATA. Andrej Kobler and Dr. Milan Hocevar, Slovenian Forestry Institute, Slovenia Dr. Saso Dzeroski, Jozef Stefan Institute, Slovenia
Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter

Contents

Table of contents

  • The Encyclopaedia Britannica
  • T - Ups (Vol. 23)
  • Cover
  • Title page
  • Title page
  • T
  • T is the twentieth symbol in our alphabet. [...]
  • TABARI AND EARLY ARAB HISTORIANS - [TAM]
  • TAMAQUA - [TASMANIA]
  • TASSIE - [TEINDS]
  • TELEGRAPH
  • TELEMETER
  • TELEPHONE
  • TELESCOPE
  • TELESPHORUS - [TEREDO]
  • TEREK - [TEXAS]
  • TEXTILES - [THEFT]
  • THEISM
  • THEMIS - [THEOGNIS]
  • THEOLOGY
  • THEOPHILUS - [THIBAUT]
  • THIBET - [TIBESTI]
  • TIBET
  • TIBULLUS - [TICONDEROGA]
  • TIDES
  • TIDOR - [TIUMEN]
  • TIVERTON - [TORPEDO]
  • TORQUATUS - [TOUCH]
  • TOUI - [TRANSVAAL]
  • TRANSVERSE FLUTE, THE, - or GERMAN FLUTE - [TRIGGER-FISH]
  • TRIGONOMETRY
  • TRILOBITES - [TUNGUSES]
  • TUNICATA
  • TUNING FORK - [TURIN]
  • TURKESTAN
  • TURKEY
  • TURKEY, an abbreviation for TURKEY-COCK or TURKEY-HEN - [TYP]
  • TYPOGRAPHY
  • TYR - [TZETZES]
  • U
  • PRINCIPAL CONTENTS.
  • Cover
  • Spine

Full text

  
impeachment for and conviction of treason is a ground for remov- 
ing the president, vice-president, and other civil officers. The 
punishment by an Act of 1790 was declared to be death by hanging. 
But during the Civil War a new Act (17 July 1862) was passed, 
providing that the punishment should be death, or, at the discretion 
of the court, imprisonment at hard labour for not less than five 
years, and a fine of not less than 10,000 dollars to be levied on the 
real and personal property of the offender, in addition to disability 
to hold any office under the United States. The Act of 1862 and 
other Acts also deal with the crimes of inciting or engaging in 
rebellion or insurrection, criminal correspondence with foreign 
Governments in relation to any disputes or controversies with the 
United States, or to defeat the measures of the Government of | 
the United States, seditions, conspiracy, recruiting soldiers or | 
sailors and enlistment to serve against the United States. The 
Act of 1790 further provides for the delivery to the prisoner of 
a copy of the indictment and a list of the jurors, for defence by 
counsel, and for the finding of the indictment within three years 
after the commission of the treason. Misprision of treason is de- | 
fined to be the crime committed by a person owing allegiance to | 
the United States, and having knowledge of the commission of any 
crime against them, who conceals and does not as soon as may be 
disclose and make known the same to the president or to some 
judge of the United States, or to the governor or to some judge 
or justice of a particular State. The punishment is imprisonment 
for not more than seven years and a fine of not more than 1000 
dollars (see Revised Statutes, §§ 1033, 1034, 1043, 5331- 5338 ; Story, 
Constitution of the United WMtales, §§ 1296-1301, 1796-1802). 
Treason against the United States cannot be inquired into by any 
State court, but the States may, and some of them have, their own 
constitutions and legislation as to treasons committed against 
themselves, generally following the lines of the constitution and 
legislation of the United States. In some cases there are differ- 
ences which are worth notice. Thus the constitution of Massa- 
chusetts, § 25, declares that no subject ought in any case or in 
any time to be declared guilty of treason by the legislature. The 
same provision is contained in the constitutions of Vermont, 
Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Alabama, and others. In some States | 
the crime of treason cannot be pardoned ; in others, as in New 
York, it may be pardoned by the legislature, and the governor may 
suspend the sentence until the end of the session of the legislature 
next following conviction. In some States a person convicted of 
treason is disqualified for exercising the franchise. In New York | 
conviction carries with it forfeiture of real estate for the life of the 
convict and of his goods and chattels. (J. W+t.) 
TREASURE-TROVE is defined by Blackstone to be 
money or coin, gold, silver, plate, or bullion found hidden 
in the earth or other private place, the owner thereof being 
unknown. This definition is simply an extension of the 
Roman law definition of thesaurus wnventus as an ancient 
deposit of money (vetus depositio pecuniz) found by 
accident and without actual search. The right to treasure- 
trove was not, however, the same in Roman and English 
law. The former at its latest stage divided it between the 
finder and the owner of the land on which it was found, 
except where it was found on public or imperial property, 
when one-half went to the fisc. If a man found treasure 
on his own land, he had a right to the whole. The rights 
of the crown, modified by those of the feudal lord, gradu- 
ally became more extensive in the feudal law of Europe, 
so much so as to become, in the words of Grotius, *jus 
commune et quasi gentium.” In more recent times there 
has been a return, at any rate in the case of France, to the 
division made by the Roman law. In England the com- 
mon law, which at one time apparently conferred treasure- 
trove, wherever found, upon the finder, now gives it all to 
the king, in accordance with the maxim *quod nullius est 
fit domini regis.” This is always provided that the owner 
cannot be known or discovered. If he can be, he and not 
the king is entitled to it. 
A right to treasure-trove may be granted by the British crown as 
a FRANCHISE (¢.2.). It is the duty of one finding treasure to make 
it known to the coroner. By the statute De Officio Coronatoris 
(4 Edw. I. st. 2), the coroner is to inquire of treasure that is found, 
who were the finders and likewise who is suspected thereof, and 
that may be well perceived where one liveth riotously, haunting 
taverns, and hath done so of long time. Concealment of treasure- 
trove is a misdemeanour at common law. There can be no larceny 
of it until it has been found by the coroner to be the property of 
the crown. The Home Office has recently issued a notification 
modifying the existing regulations so far as to permit the finders 
of coins and antiquities coming under the description of treasure- 
trove to retain articles not actually required for national institu- 
tions, and the sum received from such institutions as the antiquarian 
value of any articles retained, subject to a deduction of 20 per cent. 
from the antiquarian value of the objects retained and 10 per cent. 
from the value of other objects. In the United States treasure- 
trove is usually vested in the State as bona vacantio. Louisiana 
follows the French Code Ciwil, and gives half to the finder and half 
to the landowner. The importance of treasure-trove in India led 
to the passing of the Indian Treasure-Trove Act (Act vi. of 1878). 
[t 1»1'u\'i«1q-s that treasure is to be delivered to the finder if no owner 
appears. If the owner can be found, three-fourths 2o 1o the finder 
and one-fourth to the owner, power being reserved to the Govern- 
ment to acquire it by payment of a sum equal to one-fifth more 
than the value of the material. 
TREATIES. 1. A treaty i1s a contract between two or Ter 
o 9y . . F(“ ) 
more states. The term * tractatus, ’ and its derivatives, log 
) oJ 
though of occasional occurrence in this sense from the 13th 
century onwards, only began to be commonly so employed, 
in lieu of the older technical terms *conventio publica,” 
or “feedus,” from the end of the 17th century. In the 
language of modern diplomacy the term * treaty” is re- 
stricted to the more important international agreements, 
especially to those which are the work of a congress, while 
agreements dealing with subordinate questions are de- 
scribed by the more general term convention.” The 
present article will disregard this distinction. 
9. The making and the observance of treaties 1S Neces- Ant 
sarily a very early phenomenon in the history of civilization, quit 
and the theory of treaties was one of the first departments 
of international law to attract attention. Treaties are 
| recorded on the monuments of Egypt and Assyria ; they 
occur in the Old Testament Scriptures; and questions 
arising under ovvfijkae and “foedera” occupy much space 
in the Greek and Roman historians.! 
3. Treaties have been classified on many principles, Clafa- 
of which it will suffice to mention the more important. A tior 
“personal treaty,” having reference to dynastic interests, 
is contrasted with a “real treaty,” which binds the nation 
irrespectively of constitutional changes ; treaties creating 
' outstanding obligations are opposed to transitory con- 
ventions,” e.g., for cession of territory, recognition of inde- 
pendence, and the like, which operate irrevocably once for 
all, leaving nothing more to be done by the contracting 
parties ; and treaties in the nature of a definite transaction 
(Rechtsgeschdift) are opposed to those which aim at estab- 
| lishing a general rule of conduct (Rechtssatz). With refer- 
  
ence to their objects, treaties may perhaps be conveniently 
classified as (1) political, including treaties of peace, of 
alliance, of cession, of boundary, for creation of inter- 
national servitudes, of neutralization, of guarantee, of 
submission to arbitration ; (2) commercial, including con- 
sular and fishery conventions, and slave trade and naviga- 
tion treaties ; (3) confederations for special social objects, 
such as the Zollverein, the Latin monetary union, and the 
still wider unions with reference to posts, telegraphs, sub- 
marine cables, and weights and measures ; (4) relating o 
criminal justice, e.g., to extradition and arrest of fugitive 
seamen ; (5) relating to civil justice, e.g., to the protect.ion 
of trade-mark and copyright, to the execution of foreign 
judgments, to the reception of evidence, and to actions by 
and against foreigners ; (6) providing general rules for the 
conduct of warfare, e.g., the declaration of Paris and the 
convention of Geneva. It must be remarked that it is nob 
always possible to assign a treaty wholly to one or other 
of the above classes, since many treaties contain in com- 
bination clauses referable to several of them. 
"1 For the celebrated treaty of 509 B.C. between Rome and Carthage, 
see Polybius iii. 22; and, on the subject generally, Barbeyrac’s full 
but very uncritical Histoire des Anciens Traités, 1739; Miiller- 
Jochmus, Geschichte des Vilkerrechts im Alterthum, 1848 ; E. Egger, 
Btudes Historiques sur les Traités Publics chez les Grecs et chez les 
Romains, new ed., 1866. 
 
	        

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