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the Su-su-hunang of Java, where he procured a reinforcement of native troops to join his own against those of the rebellious governors of the sultan. Detachments of the garrisons of Samarang and Wittevrede likewise marched towards the seat of the insurrection. In the mean time, the insurgents spread themselves over the Dutch province of Kadoe; and, though they were successfully attacked and dispersed, wherever they could be met by a Dutch detachment, they were too numerous, and carried on their operations over too extensive a tract of country to be effectually controlled by the scanty army which was opposed to them.

In August regulations were issued by the government of Batavia, by which all persons between the ages of 16 and 45, foreigners included, were compelled to enrol themselves, and to perform military duty; and soon afterwards many of them were forced to march into the interior, to assist in putting down the insurrection. This proceeding occasioned violent irritation, especially among the English merchants, who were little disposed to risk their lives for a government which they despised. To add to the distress, an expedition which had been sent against Macassar returned with the loss of nearly half their numbers, and without having accomplished any of the objects for which they were sent. The communication by land between the capital and Samarang was cut off, and the despatches were transmitted by sea. General Kock occupied Samarang, where all was tranquil; but the native princes were in force at a distance of not more than 20 miles, and offered large rewards for the head of the Dutch commander. On the 2nd of September, an en

gagement took place about 50 miles S. E. of Samarang: the rebels were about 12,000 strong, and were opposed only by 60 European seamen from the Javan frigate, 100 infantry natives of Madura, 20 gentlemen volunteer cavalry, and 20 native cavalry, with two 14lb. field pieces. The greater part of this force was cut to pieces, all the arms and ammunition captured, and only the officers of the detachment, a few of the volunteer cavalry, and 16 of the European sailors returned in safety. Out of ten English gentlemen employed in commerce in Batavia, who accompanied the troops, seven, it is said, fell in the skirmish. This advantage did not induce the natives to quit the interior and venture upon a decisive engagement. On the contrary, the Dutch having assembled in considerable force at Samarang, the insurgents withdrew from the vicinity. Several unimportant skirmishes took place between small detachments of the Dutch and bands of the natives, in which the former had the advantage. But, though the insurgents dispersed, they soon reunited upon some other point.

About the same time an attempt was made to cut off the Dutch residents in Bencoolen.

Sweden, Denmark, and Germany remained, during the present year, in their usual state, without undergoing any alteration of circumstances worthy of being mentioned. One transaction occurred at Stockholm, which excited some attention in Europe. The government had sold three ships of war: the purchasers were an English mercantile house, who, however, there was every reason to believe, were merely the agents of one of the

South American states. The Spanish ambassador presented remonstrances, to which civil, but somewhat evasive answers were re turned; and finally, upon an application made by the nominal purchasers, the contract was rescinded, and the money which they had paid, together with the amount of the expenses which they had incurred in repairing the ships, was refunded to them. An article on the subject of this sale appeared in the Algemeine Zeitung, which was re-published in a newspaper entitled the Argus, printed at Stockholm. The chancellor immediately instituted a prosecution against the Argus, on the ground that this article was a violation of article 10 of the ordinance relative to the liberty of the press, by which the publication of any thing relative to negotiations with foreign powers, or to the resolutions of his majesty respecting them, as well as to the functions of the ministers, councillors, or ambassadors, is prohibited. The defence which the editor set up was, that the chancellor, according to the ordinance relative to the freedom of the press, was bound to confiscate all writings in foreign languages imported into Sweden, which contain any thing contrary to the 3rd section of article 10 of that ordinance. as the paper from which the article was taken had not been confiscated by the chancellor, the editor of the Argus was entitled to consider this as a proof that the chancellor himself did not look upon the article as illegal, and, consequently, he had a right to insert it in his The result of the trial was, that the defendant was acquitted.

Now,

paper.

An order of the king of Prussia, directed to the authorities of his

Rhenish provinces, prohibited the Roman Catholic priests from exacting, previous to the celebration of marriage between parents of different sects, a promise that the offspring should be brought up in the Roman Catholic system.

Some of the members of the Holy Alliance, who had nearly renounced all intercourse with Wurtemberg, as not sufficiently friendly to their principles, renewed their diplomatic relations with that power. Both Russia and Austria again sent Ambassadors to Stutgard, and professed to have forgiven the constitutional tendency of the feelings and maxims of the king.

Maximilian Joseph, the king of Bavaria, was attacked by apoplexy and died at Munich, on the 13th of October. He was succeeded by the prince royal, Charles Louis Augustus, who was 39 years of age, and married, in 1810, a princess of Saxe Hildeburghausen. Maximilian Joseph was exceedingly popular among his subjects; and he deserved their love. He was free from bigotry and prejudice; a friend to improvement, but not hasty and incautious; shrewd, sagacious, and good tempered; not over-fond of power, and mild and temperate in the exercise of it; most simple and unassuming in his manners, and most economical in his personal expenditure.

The assembly of the states of Baden met on the 24th of February. The grand duke, in the speech with which he opened the session, alluded, in a manner not unworthy of notice, to the ground of dissention which had arisen two years before, between him and that body.*

"The Constitution," said he,

⚫ See Annual Register, Vol. 65, p. 172.

"has left all the rights of the Executive power united in the person of the sovereign; it made only the exercise of some positive rights depend on the co-operation of the States. But this co-operation can tend to a final result, only by union and concord, without which that which exists may be maintained, but the desire of real amelioration cannot be accomplished; a limitation of my duties as member of the Confederation is no part of the co-operation of the States. If these principles have been at times involved in obscurity, the develop ment of the federal constitution of Germany has given to the monarchical principle a more solid basis. The resolutions of the federal Diet have dispelled all obscurity and all doubts on this point. "If, then, gentlemen, you content yourselves with the honour able vocation of co-operating, with reciprocal calmness and moderation, for the good of the country by conscientious exertions, and by your knowledge and experience keeping within the limits prescribed by the constitution, the grand duchy, and by the resolutions of the Germanic diet, my people will for the first time enjoy, in their full extent, the blessings of a German representative constitution."

Steps were taken by the Swiss diet, but without success, to induce the grand duchy of Baden to suspend or relax the new tariff, by which heavy duties were imposed on the importation of various commodities from Switzerland into Baden. The Swiss, finding that their representations were without effect, had recourse to a system of reprisals, and imposed heavy duties on importations from the Grand Duchy.

The Swiss diet was opened on

the 4th of July, at Lucerne, in the usual form. The speech delivered by the president on that occasion, stated, that there was nothing to excite any uneasy feeling respecting the circumstances of the country, if the members of the confederation fulfilled their duties. In the the subsequent discussions relative to the internal concerns of Switzerland, it was urgently recommended that no engagements might be made with foreign powers to furnish a greater quantity of soldiers than Switzerland itself could supply; because, by engaging for a larger number, the cantons were obliged to receive foreigners into the companies to be raised, who, when the time of their service expired, returned into the country, and settled there. On another occasion, the governments of the cantons were earnestly exhorted to take care that the schools were nowhere confided to the hands of persons not imbued with sound principles of law and government.

The Hungarian Diet assembled at Presburg on the 14th of September; when the proceedings were commenced by a speech in the Hungarian language from the royal commissioner. On the 16th, the emperor proceeded in great pomp to the diet, and in the presence of more than 800 of the magistrates, delivered to the States a speech in the Latin language [see Public Documents, p. 92*]; after which the royal propositions, containing the business for which they had been called together, were handed to the chancellor. The examination of these propositions, which asked a supply of men and money, was referred to a committee; but in the mean time, the

:

Diet discussed and agreed to a very firm representation or remonstrance, couched in most respectful language, stating their grievances, and humbly appealing to his Majesty for redress. They complained in it that contributions had been exacted, and recruits for the army levied, without their authority or consent, contrary to the statutes of the kingdom, and that the Diet had not been regularly and periodically convened and they expressed their wish to have a satisfactory answer on these preliminary points, before they decided on the royal propositions. They declared their alarms at seeing, that, in open defiance of the fundamental laws of the king dom, and in contravention of articles adopted in 1790 and 1791 (by which the wounds of the constitution had been closed), they had been deprived of the protection of the laws in the exercise of their principal immunities, rights, and prerogatives, without any regard to the enormous sacrifices which they had made since that time; that the constitution had been again attacked; that the respect due to fundamental laws had been violated; and that the whole edifice of their ancient privileges had been shaken to its foundation. This remonstrance was presented to the emperor on the 22nd of October. The answer of his Majesty was temperate and indulgent. He expressed his sorrow at their delay in considering the royal propositions; urged the necessity of a prompt compliance; professed his attachment to the constitution; stated the reasons, why its forms had in some instances not been strictly observed; and promised in future to convene the Diet once in three years, or oftener, if they wished it. This indulgent language restored har

mony between the Diet and their sovereign.

In February, the emperor of Russia issued a proclamation, convoking the estates of the kingdom of Poland for the third general Diet, to open on the 13th of May, and to close on the 13th of June.

"Senators and Deputies," said Alexander, in his proclamation, "two Diets have already been held. That of 1818, guided by a spirit of concord and harmony, promoted by wise laws, the welfare of the kingdom. That of 1820, which spent its valuable time in useless disputes, has hardly left a trace of its labours. This will teach you to avoid the consequences of discord, and the delusion of mistaken self-love." In another proclamation, dated the 13th of February, he endeavoured to avoid the evils, to which he alluded, by an alteration in the publicity of the discussions. "Being desirous," said he, "of removing the danger which the abuse of one article in the charter has already caused, and may cause again-considering that the publicity of the debates in both Chambers has induced the speakers to think rather of an ephemeral popularity than of the public good, by which the debates degenerated into empty declamations, calculated to destroy the expected unanimity, and to banish the tranquillity and decorum which should prevail in every important deliberation-desiring to cure the evil in its source, and to cause our subjects of the kingdom of Poland to enjoy all the benefits which the charter accords to them, we have resolved to fortify our work, by altering, by means of an additional article, one point of the regulations which experience has proved to us to be highly detrimental."

The following is Dr. Clarke's account of Taganrog:

"The number of inhabitants does not

He therefore decreed that the the Sea of Azof. He stopped at sittings at the opening and close of Taganrog, a town situate upon the Diet, and those in which the royal sanction of projects of law was declared, should be public as in time past; but that in the elections of committees, and in every discussion and debate in the two Chambers, they should always form themselves into a special committee. This regulation was declared to form an inseparable part of the

charter.

The Diet met at Warsaw on the 13th of May, and was closed on the 13th of June. Alexander was highly satisfied with their diligence and docility. The speech with which he opened, and that with which he terminated their session, show for what purposes they were convened, and how they were engaged [see Public Documents, pp. 93, 95*].

Alexander, during the present year, spent much of his time in traversing the various provinces of his dominions. Towards the end of Autumn he visited the Crimea. His health had been for some time declining: but, in consequence of his activity in moving from place to place, and partly also by reason of the little communication of the districts, in which he then was, with the rest of Europe, the failure of his constitution was little known, and the reports concerning it did not attract much notice in Europe. On the 10th of November he quitted the port of Sebastopol, after having minutely inspected it, and every thing connected with the fleet in the Black Sea. On his way to Bachtchiserai, he found himself slightly affected with a pain in his head, which he attributed to having caught cold. On his return, nevertheless, he made a party on horseback to travel along the shore of

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exceed 5,000. The water, as in the Don,
is very unwholesome when the winds
carry off the salt water; but when a cur-
rent sets in from the sea, it is more
salutary. The foundation of a town, in-
tended for the metropolis of the empire,
in a place liable to insuperable disadvan
tages, was not one of the wisest plans of
Peter the Great. The water here is so
shallow, that no haven could possibly
have been constructed, unless by form-
ing canals at an expense beyond all cal-
culation. The ships now performing
quarantine lie off at the distance of ten
miles; and all vessels drawing from
eight to ten feet water cannot approach
nearer to the town than fifteen versts.
habitants; but, in consequence of a ca-
Taganrog formerly contained 70,000 in-
pitulation made with the Turks, the
original city was entirely rased. Its
revival may be referred to the establish-
tahivan. At present all the best houses
ment of the Armenian colony at Nakh-

are in its suburbs. The citadel contains
a miserable village, full of ruins, exhi-
biting, at the same time, traces of con-
siderable works now abandoned. The
inhabitants entertain hopes that the
emperor will visit and inspect the place,
and that it will then become a town of
the first importance in the empire.
There is not any situation in the south
of Russia more favourable for commerce,
were it not for the want of water. Ships
from the Black Sea find here, in readi-
ness for embarkation, all the produce of
Siberia, with the caviare, and other
commodities of Astracan; whereas at
Cherson and Odessa they have to wait
for lading after their arrival. But it is
only during three months in the year
that commerce can be carried on at
Taganrog. In winter the sea is frozen,
so that the sledges pass upon the ice to
Azof. During the short season of their
commerce, the rent of a single ware-
house upon the shore is estimated at 400
roubles. As soon as the first ships make
their appearance from the Black Sea,
the waggons from the interior begin to
arrive. The vessels undergo a quaran-
tine, during all which time the caravans
continue to increase; and before the end

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