That although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which the... History of Europe (from 1789 to 1815). - Page 75by sir Archibald Alison (1st bart.) - 1843Full view - About this book
| 1811 - 710 pages
...in an extraordinary degree. 13. That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the Continent of Europe unfavourable; yet the extraordinary decree in which... | |
| Great Britain - 1811 - 840 pages
...extraordinary Degree. 13. — THAT, although the adverse circumstances of our Trade, together with the large amount of our Military Expenditure Abroad, may have contributed to render our Exchanges with the Continent of Europe unfavourable ; yet the extraordinary degree, in which... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1812 - 764 pages
...an extraordinary degree. 13. " That, although the adverse circumstances of onr Trade, together wilh the large amount of our Military Expenditure Abroad, may have contributed to render our Exchanges with the Continent of Europe unfavourable; yet the extraordinary degree, in which... | |
| Walter Scott - Europe - 1813 - 512 pages
...an extraordinary degree. 13. " That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
| Europe - 1813 - 506 pages
...an extraordinary degree. 13. " That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
| 1813 - 502 pages
...an extraordinary degree. 13. " That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
| Edward Copleston - Currency question - 1819 - 114 pages
...in an extraordinary de13. — THAT, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable ; yet the extraordinary degree, in which... | |
| Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1822 - 580 pages
...extraordinary degree. IS. — That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavorable; yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
| Edmund Burke - History - 1825 - 854 pages
...in an extraordinary degree. 13. That although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
| William Huskisson - 1831 - 632 pages
...an extraordinary degree. 13. " That, although the adverse circumstances of our trade, together with the large amount of our military expenditure abroad, may have contributed to render our exchanges with the continent of Europe unfavourable, yet the extraordinary degree in which... | |
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