| Esq. John Finch - 1844 - 330 стор.
...territorial jurisdiction of two Saxon sovereigns in England, but is now destroyed. After many a century of war, few artificial lines of demarcation appear...North to the South Pole, at a distance of one hundred leagues to the west of the Azores, and was intended to separate the conquests of the King of Spain... | |
| 1868 - 472 стор.
...settle peacefully whatever each might win within his demarcation.1 1 This demarcation was a line drawn from the North to the South * Pole, at a distance of one hundred leagues west of the Azores and Cape Verde islands. Solorzano gives a translation of the Bull in his... | |
| Alexander von Humboldt - 1880 - 470 стор.
...establishes to all eternity," the line of demarcation* between the Spanish and Portuguese possessions, at a distance of one hundred miles to the west of the Azores. If we consider further, that Columbus, immediately after his return from his first voyage of discovery,... | |
| William M. Davidson - 1902 - 620 стор.
...Columbus discovery Spain was to have all lands, no matter by whom discovered, lying west of a line drawn from the North to the South Pole at a distance of one hundred leagues to the west of the Azores and Cape Verd Islands. This line as at first drawn not being satisfactory,... | |
| Edwin Wiley, Irving Everett Rines, Albert Bushnell Hart - 1916 - 568 стор.
...half.* This bull gave to Spain " all lands that might be discovered west and south of a line drawn from the North to the South Pole, at a distance of one hundred leagues west of the Azores and Cape Verde Islands." In June, 1494, the line was changed and by the... | |
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