APPENDIX, N b II. 
483 
goods, may always pass safe in our seas, and freely and in 
all security may come and go into any part of the Imperial 
limits of our dominions, in such sort, that neither any of 
the nation, their goods and faculties, shall receive any hin- 
drance or molestation from any person whatsoever. 
ARTICLE IV. 
“ All English, ships or vessels, small or great, shall and 
may at any time safely and securely come and harbour in 
any of the scales and ports of our dominions, and likewise 
may from thence depart at their pleasure, without deten- 
tion or hindrance of any man. 
ARTICLE VII. 
“ The English merchants, interpreters, brokers, and 
all other subjects of that nation, whether by sea or land, 
may freely and safely come and go in all the ports of our 
dominions; or, returning into their own country, all our 
Beglerbegs, Ministers, Governors, and other Officers, Cap- 
tains by sea of ships, and others whomsoever our slaves 
and subjects, we command that none of them do or shall 
lay hands upon their persons or faculties, or upon any 
pretence shall do them any hindrance or injury. 
ARTICLE XVIII. 
“ All those particular privileges and capitulations, which 
in former times have been granted to the French, Venetians, 
or any other Christian nation, whose king is in peace and 
friendship with the Porte, in like manner the same were 
granted and given to the said English nation ; to the end 
that, in time to come, the tenor of this our Imperial capitu- 
lation may be always observed by all men ; and that none 
may, in any manner, upon any pretence, presume to con- 
tradict or violate it. 
ARTICLE XXII. 
“ The English nation, and all those that come under 
their banner, their vessels, small or great, shall and may 
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