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INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
Professor A. PEARCE HIGGINS, C.B.E., K.C., LL.D.
(Whewell Professor of International Law, Cambridge; Membre
de Institut de Droit International.)
I ave much pleasure in complying with the request of
Dr. Colombos to write an Introductory Chapter to his
Treatise on the Law of Prize. Dr. Colombos began his
researches, which have resulted in this book, when he
was studying International Law under my direction at
the London School of Economics and Political Science.
His first intention was to limit his work to the applica-
tion of Prize Law to British Prize Courts, and this is
the main basis of the text. He has, however, gone much
further, and has taken a complete survey of the working
of the Prize Courts in all the belligerent countries, with
the exception of Turkey, during the War of 1914—18.
His plan is to state the law as understood in Great
Britain and the United States in 1914, and then to
examine, under the various appropriate headings of the
matters dealt with in Prize Courts, the judgments
delivered in the Prize Courts of the British Empire. He
then appends in slightly smaller type the decisions of
the Prize Courts of France, Germany, Italy, Austria-
Hungary, Russia, Japan, China, Belgium, Portugal,
Roumania, and Siam. The Prize Courts of the United
States did not sit during the War; the large number of
enemy merchant ships lying in American waters when
she entered the War were taken over by legislative and
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