A. D. 1763. 367 



months allowed them to wind up their aftairs and fell or remove their 

 property ; for which purpofe Britifh veflels, not exceeding a limited 

 number and tunnage, were permitted to make one voyage each to thofe 

 iflands under certain flipulated regulations. 



IX) The iflands of Grenada and the Grenadines were ceded to Great 

 Britain, with the fame flipulations in favour of the inhabitants refpedt- 

 ing their religion and property, that were provided for thofe of Canada 

 by the fourth article. Of the neutral iflands, St. Vincent, Dominica, 

 and Tobago, were ceded in full right to Great Britain, and St. Lucia to 

 France. 



X) On the coafl: of Africa Goree was reftored to France : and the 

 river Senegal wdth all its rights and dependencies, together with the 

 forts and factories of St. Louis, Podor, and Galam, were ceded to Great 

 Britain. 



XI) In the Fad Indies Great Britain reftored to the French the fac- 

 tories they pofleflxid at the beginning of the year 1749 in Coromandel, 

 Orixa, Malabar, and Bengal, they renouncing all pretenfions to any 

 places in Coromandel and Orixa acquired fince 1749, and reftoring all 

 places taken from Great Britain in the prefent war, and efpecially Na-. 

 tall and Tapanoully (or Bencoolen) in the ifland of Sumatra, and en- 

 gaging to eftabliOi no forts or garrifons in Bengal. 



XII) France reftored the ifland of Minorca to Great Britain. 



XVII) The king of Great Britain engaged to deftroy the fortifica- 

 tions erected in the Bay of Honduras and other Spanifli territories in 

 America; the king of Spain engaging that the fubjeds of Great Bri- 

 tain fliould not be molefted in cutting or fliipping logwood. 



XVIII) Spain, having no conquefts to reftore, yet defirous of appear- 

 ing to concede fomething, gave up a claim, fiiid to be made by the 

 people of Guipufcoa, to a right of fiOiing in the neighbourhood of New- 

 foundland *. 



XIX) Great Britain reftored to Spain the Havanna with the annexed 

 large diftrict of the ifland of Cuba, the Britifli fettlers having eighteen 

 months allowed to prepare for their departure on the fame terms agreed 

 on for the evacuation of the iflands ceded to France by the eighth 

 article. 



XX) Spain ceded to Great Britain Florida, comprehending all the 

 country between the river Mifllfippi and the Britifli province of Georgia, 

 except the town and ifland of New Orleans belonging to France, the in- 

 habitants being allowed to remain and enjoy their religion, or retire in 

 eighteen months, as ftipulated for the French Canadians by the fourth 

 article. 



The other articles of the treaty relate to arrangements on the conti- 



• Such a claim had been mentioned in ilic treaty of tlie year 1713, wlicn it was allowed 10 lie over 

 unexplained. 



3 



