INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER.
the judgments delivered, both by the Judges in Prize
and by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council,
which is the supreme appellate tribunal for the British
Empire in matters of Prize, will, both for learning and
for clarity of exposition, not unfavourably challenge
comparison with those classical pronouncements on the
Law of Nations on which the fame of Lord Stowell is
securely based. A careful survey of the decisions of
the British Prize Courts, such as Dr. Colombos has made,
will prove that they are worthy of the great traditions
of these tribunals.
No history of the Great War of 1914-18 is complete,
nor can the operations of the belligerents be fully under-
stood without a knowledge of the part played by the
naval forces of the combatants in their war on commerce.
This aspect of the War is of vital importance to the
members of the British Empire; and a study of the
decisions of our Prize Courts will show that the effects
of sea power in that war were similar to those in former
wars by enabling the Power having the maritime
predominance to prohibit the transportation of supplies
for his enemy, and thus to undermine his commercial
prosperity. Naval war on commerce, whether directed
against enemy property or against neutral vessels
engaged in assisting the enemy by carrying contraband,
attempting to break blockade, or performing acts of
unneutral service, is regulated by law. It is with this
law, and with the Courts which administer it, that this
book is concerned.
The work of the English Prize Court attracted
singularly little attention from the general public during
the late war. The greater number of decisions were
unreported in the public Press. Many of them were,