exterritoriality

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exterritoriality
exterritoriality (ɛkstɛrɪˌtɔərɪˈælɪtɪ) [ad. F. exterritorialité (in Littré): see prec. and -ity.] The condition of being considered outside the territory of the state in which (a person) resides, and therefore of not being amenable to its laws. Also extraterritoriality. The privilege of exterritoria... Oxford English Dictionary
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exterritorialize
exterritorialize, v. rare—1. (ˌɛkstɛrɪˈtɔərɪəlaɪz) [f. exterritorial + -ize.] trans. To secure the privileges of exterritoriality for; to withdraw (a person) from liability to the laws of the country in which he resides.1870 Pall Mall G. 5 Nov. 11 The Roman Catholic missionaries..in their ill-judged... Oxford English Dictionary
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Eleftherios Papadimitriou
17N trial in 2003, as well as, representing the municipality of Kommeno, concerning the Nazi massacre in 1943, before the Greek Supreme Special Court (exterritoriality wikipedia.org
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exterritorial
exterritorial, a. (ɛkstɛrɪˈtɔərɪəl) [f. ex- prefix1 + territorial; after next.] Of or pertaining to exterritoriality.1880 in Ogilvie. 1892 Law Times XCII. 392/1 To those who..administer exterritorial laws, this book will be of great use. Hence exterriˈtorially adv., beyond the limits of ‘one's’ own ... Oxford English Dictionary
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John Gerard (Royalist)
Pantaleone Sá sought sanctuary in the ambassador's residence, but the Lord Chief Justice, Henry Rolle, supported by other expert opinions, decided that exterritoriality wikipedia.org
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extraterritoriality
ˌextraterriˌtoriˈality [f. prec. + -ity.] The privilege accorded by the Law of Nations to ambassadors of being regarded as outside the territory of the power to which they are sent, and therefore of being free from its jurisdiction. Also exterritoriality. Extended later to denote the right of jurisd... Oxford English Dictionary
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Henry Rolle
The fact was undeniable, but the Don claimed the privilege of exterritoriality, due to his being a member of the Ambassador's household. The decision was without precedent, for it could neither be denied that the Don was of the household of the ambassador, nor that the privilege of exterritoriality wikipedia.org
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jurisdiction
jurisdiction (dʒʊərɪsˈdɪkʃən) Forms: 4–6 iure-, (4 iuri-, iurdiccion), 4–7 iurisdiccion, etc. (with usual interchange of i and y, cc and ct, on and oun), 5 iurisdycion, 7– jurisdiction. [orig. a. OF. jure-, juri-, jurdiction, -dicion (F. juridiction), ad. L. jūrisdictiōn-em, f. jūris, gen. of jūs la... Oxford English Dictionary
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Thomas Franklin Fairfax Millard
Harcourt, Brace and Company. 1931 The End of Exterritoriality in China. Shanghai: A.B.C. Press. 1973 Thomas F. wikipedia.org
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治外法权
后期受日本影响而实际上与「exterritoriality」相挂钩,强调的是外交官员豁免于所在国的法律管辖。而extraterritoriality与exterritoriality在实质上是有所区别:前者「指一国法律的域外适用。 20世纪初以后,日本国际法语境中脱胎而来的「治外法权」, 指的就是后者:1906年京师法律学堂由日本人岩井尊闻主讲的国际公法,到后中文再出版的几种法律辞典,均将该概念与exterritoriality并列。 wikipedia.org
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Immanuel Church (Tel Aviv)
World War I (1914-1917) After the outbreak of World War I the Sublime Porte de facto abolished the personal exterritoriality and consular jurisdiction wikipedia.org
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History of the Jews in Egypt
In 1937, the Egyptian government annulled the Capitulations, which gave foreign nationals a virtual status of exterritoriality: the minority groups affected wikipedia.org
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