Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 8.djvu/471

 TREATY WITH MUSCAT. 1833. 459 Am-. 7. If any citizens of the United States, or their vessels, or other Citizens of property, shall be taken by pirates and brought within the dominions of U- S- *°k°" bY the Sultan, the persons shall be set at liberty, and the property restored girl;?;',.:; bgbgm to the owner, if he is present, or to the American consul, or to any i l authorized agent. Amr. S. Vessels belonging to the subjects of the Sultan, which may vamp, of th, resort to any port in the United States, shall pay no other or higher Sultan tv pay rate of duties or other charges than the nation the most favoured shall ;f},“g§°"g,‘Q‘°“ pay.' Am. 9. The President of the United States may appoint consuls to pmgdmr gf reside in the ports of the Sultan where the principal commerce shall be U·_S· ¤¤¤Y ¤P- earried on, which consuls shall be the exclusive judges of all disputes or suits wherein American citizens shall be engaged with each other. ties; &c. They shall have power to receive the property of any American citizen dying within the kingdom, and to send the same to his heirs, first pay- ing all his debts due to the subjects of the Sultan. The said ’consuls shall not be arrested, nor shall their property be seized, nor shall any of their household be arrested, but their persons and property, and their houses, shall be inviolate. Should any consul, however, commit any offence against the laws of the kingdom, complaint shall be made to the President, who will immediately displace him. Concluded, signed, and sealed at the Royal Palace, in the city ot Muscat, in the kingdom of Aman, the twenty-first day of September, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three of the Christian era, and the fifty-seventh yeartof the Independence of the United States of America, corresponding to the sixth day of the moon, called Iamada Alawel, in the year of the Allhajra (Hegira) one thousand two hundred and forty-nine. EDMUND ROBERTS, (1.. s.) Wnmznas, the undersigned, Edmund Roberts, a citizen of the United States of America, and a resident of Portsmouth, in the State of New Hampshire, being duly appointed a special agent by letters patent, under the signature of the President, and seal of the United States of America, bearing date at the City of Washington, the twenty-sixth day of January, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, for negotiating and concluding a treaty of amity and commerce between the United States of America, and His Majesty Seyed Syeed Bin, Sultan of Muscat: Now, know ye, that I, Edmund Roberts, special agent as aforesaid, do conclude the foregoing treaty of amity and commerce, and every article and clause therein contained, reserving the same nevertheless for _Fin¤lratitie•. the final ratification of the President of the United States of America, tgggjtggjlrysilfgt by and with the advice and consent of the Senate of the United States.' Done at the Royal Palace, in the City of Muscat, in the Kingdom of Aman, on the twenty-first day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three, and of the Independence of the United States of America the fifty-seventh, corresponding to the sixth day of the moon, called Iamada Alawel, in the year of Allhajra (Hegira) one thousand two hundred and forty- nine. (Signed) EDMUND ROBERTS.