Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2014
1 In diplomatic parlance the Sublime Porte meant the Imperial Ottoman Government.
2 United States Department of Commerce, Trade Promotion Series No. 28. Turkey: A Commercial and Industrial Handbook, p. 228 (Washington, 1926)Google Scholar.
3 Ibid. For the text of the treaty see Malloy, , Treaties and Conventions of the United States, Vol. I, pp. 1318–1321Google Scholar.
4 Foreign Relations, 1885, pp. 890-898; 1887, pp. 1098–1107.
5 Turkey: A Commercial and Industrial Handbook, p. 229.
6 Foreign Relations, 1907, Part 2, p. 1051.
7 Hertslet, Treaties and Conventions between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. V, pp. 506–510Google Scholar.
8 Malloy, op. cit., pp. 1321–1328.
9 Foreign Relations, 1876, p. 591.
10 Ibid.
11 Foreign Relations, 1883, p. 836; 1884, p. 566.
12 Foreign Relations, 1905, p. 876. Accounts and Papers, 1906, vol. CXXXVII, Cd. 2816, pp. 57, 69, 70, 144, 145;Ibid., Cd. 2759, pp. 19, 33, 58, 68, 70, 74, 75, 80, 105.
13 Foreign Relations, 1906, Pt. II, p. 1413; Ibid., 1907, Pt. II, p. 1051.
14 Foreign Relations, 1907, Pt. II, p. 1051.
15 Ibid., pp. 1052–1053.
16 Foreign Relations, 1885, pp. 890–898.
17 Ibid., 1887, pp. 1098–1107.
18 An outstanding case was that of the arrest and imprisonment for almost two years of Dr. Maurice Pflaum by Turkish officials in 1883. Cf. Foreign Relations, 1883, pp. 809–892; 1884, pp. 532–574; 1885, pp. 809–879.
19 Great Britain, Miscellaneous No. 13 (1914), Cd. 7628, Correspondence Respecting Events Leading to the Rupture of Relations with Turkey.
20 Ambassador Morgenthau's Story, p. 115Google Scholar.
21 See Article 1 of the treaty of amity and commerce signed at Lausanne, August 6, 1913; also “Declaration of Turkish Delegation” dated July 24, 1923, in The Treaty with TurkeyGoogle Scholar, issued by the General Committee of American Institutions and Associations in Favor of Ratification of the Treaty with Turkey.
22 Great Britain, Department of Overseas Trade, Report on the Economic and Commercial Conditions in Turkey, April, 1925, p. 28Google Scholar.
23 Foreign Relations, 1893, p. x.
24 Legislation Oltomane, vol. I, p. 8Google Scholar, art. 5 (in Foreign Relations, 1868–1869, p. 2, p. 113).
25 Foreign Relations, 1887, pp. 1109–1113; Ibid., 1886, p. xi, and 1889, p. 719.
26 Foreign relations, 1863, pt. 2, p. 1183.
27 Ibid., 1867, pt. 2, p. 5.
28 Ibid., 1872, p. 656.
29 Ibid., 1874, pp. xxiii–xxv.
30 Ibid., 1881, p. 1176.
31 Ibid., 1883, p. 810.
32 Ibid., 1891, p. 750.
33 Foreign Relations, 1906, p. 880 et seq.
34 Malloy, op. cit., pp. 1341–1344.
35 Foreign Relations, 1909, pp. 596–603.
36 United States Department of State, Declarations of War and Severance of Diplomatic Relations (Washington, 1919), p. 96Google Scholar.
37 Cf. Accounts and Papers, 1920, Vol. LI, Treaty of Sèvres, Cmd. 964, pp. 1–99.
38 “The Lausanne Conference on Near Eastern Affairs, Records of Proceedings,” Accounts and Papers, vol. XXVI, Turkey, No. 1 (1923)Google Scholar. Cmd. 1814.
39 Cf. Art. 3 of the treaty.
40 Cf. Arts. 11–16 of the treaty.
41 United States Department of Commerce, Commerce Reports, January 18, 1926, p. 165Google Scholar.
42 Ibid., May 25, 1925, p. 489.
43 Ibid., August 2, 1926, p. 304.
44 Levant Trade Review, March, 1927, pp. 91–93Google Scholar.
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