580 
drowned in. landing. Officers 
wounded: brevet.major Weir, brig. 
major, slightly. Lieutenant-coloncl 
Pack, of the 71st, slightly. 
W.H. Trorrer, 
Acting deputy adjutant- general. 
Total killed, wounded, and missing, 
in the action of Jan. 8, at Blawherg. 
—1 captain, 14 rank and file, kill- 
ed; 3 field-officers, 1 captain, 5 
subalterns, 7 serjeants, 3 drummers, 
170 rank and file wounded; 8 rank 
and file missing.—Officer killed, 
24th regiment, captain Andrew 
Foster,—Officers. wounded, 59th 
regiment, Alexander M‘Pherson, 
badly. 7ist. brevet lieutenant-co- 
lonel Campbell. 72d, lieutenant- 
colonel Grant; lieutenant Chis- 
holm. 93d, brevet lieutenant-co- 
lonel Honeyman. 78th, liente- 
nants Scoble and Strachan, attached 
to 93d regiment. 86th, ensigns 
Heddrick and Craig. 
W.H. Trorter, 
Acting deputy-adjutant-general. 
The articles of capitulation state, 
that the garrison of Cape Town 
shall become prisovers of war; such 
-officers as are married to natives. 
or are domiciliated, being allowed 
to remain jn the town on their pa- 
roie. The French subjects belong- 
ing to two stranded ships, are in- 
cluded in the surrender. ‘The inha- 
bitants of the town who have borne 
arms, to be allowed to return fo 
their former occupations.—Articles 
6 to 13, contain the following re- 
gulations :—All blond fide property 
shall remain free and untouched. 
Public property of every description 
shall be faithfully delivered up, and 
proper inventories given as soon as 
possible. Tie burghers and inha- 
bitants shall preserve all their rights 
aud privileges. Public worship, as 
at present inuse, shall be maintained 
ANNUAL REGISTER, 1806. 
without alteration.—The paper 
money in circulation shall eontinue 
> 
current, until the pleasure of his — 
Britannic majesty is known.—The 
lands and houses, the property of 
the Batavian republic, which must 
be delivered up, shall remain as se- 
curity for that part of the paper 
money which is not already secured 
by mortgages upon the estates of in- 
dividuals.—Prisoners of war com- 
prehended in the present capitula- 
tion, shall not be pressed into his 
Britanuic majesty’s service. The 
inhabitants of Cape Town shall be | 
exenipted from having troops quar- 
tered on them. ‘Two ships -hav- 
ing been sunk in Table Bay, to the 
great detriment of theroadsted,cither 
after the Batavian republic had sent 
out a flag of iruce, or whilst it was 
in contemplation so to do, they are 
to be raised, and delivered over in 
an entire state of repair. This hav- 
ing been done without the sanction 
of the commandant, the raising of 
the said ships shall be incumbent on 
those who sunk them. 
General Return of Ordnance on 
the several Latteries of Cape Town, 
and its Dependencies, Jan. 12,1806. © 
—Total, 113 brass, and 343 iron 
pieces of ordnance—456. 
W. Spicer, 
eee 
Extract of a Dispatch from Sir D. 
Baird, dated Cape Town, Jan. 13. 
General Janssens has retired to Hot- 
tentots Holland Kloof, and advices 
this instant received state him to have 
sent his forces over the Kloof, esfi- 
mating them at 1200 men, with 28 
pieces of artillery, and 200 wags 
gons. 
50 waggons, which are said to be 
coming 
He has discharged the farm- — 
ers from the service, and dismissed , 
