{ title: 'The Geneva gazette. (Geneva, N.Y.) 1809-1825, October 18, 1809, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031109/1809-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031109/1809-10-18/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031109/1809-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031109/1809-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Rochester Regional Library Council
I Ti m 4V Hu / / r * *t hi / Mxtraet from the'Mimmfidme of ; f$|j> Vacchia Jfes furnished »s with a copy or me on^lfed* % bis holiness Pics 7th hl%id4mfi,i#ns> and of the patrimony of the 'eh&hJ'Slti.lMviiM of t #ve jij^ten'ce of ex^ ; mnfunicatlpn issued against^ Bonaparte and us accomplices, on the>i©rh-fl£ June: torhich WS.VQ£-$^f ope. #r$ .jSerewjth published, to render t'heJm more^generally %iown through- ,ou%the cathol|C\A|.orl4*' . . . \; pink POPE yn. % y Tydisastro'u? designs '6$ the foes^of the &poltoffc>l See are at length completed, '*; &ftef snfrerlpg the potent 'and iniquitous : spojiklon oi;tftefairest; arid most considerable portM o^pur dominions', w;e now behold our- selves *'4^prwed entirely, under >uriwprthy pretext's ;|ndffth the most grievous mj&nrice, of .all ou? ymparal'soive^t'gri'iys^with which; der the pressure pT Wis'>e'vere persecution •r.tte& it has-not beep, i^prred for any wrong doiie tpjtjhe Emper,or,7or .to France; which has Wn, jaiwarvs the obj'ec* of ou^r 'tender fatb~ ,eriy solicitude \ nor on .'account pf an* worldly political artifice j. but because we would not betray pur duties or our consci- ence. ._. . ViA ••:*•, .<. .-•„.. \' . JfcJo';one Wno'professes'the Catholic ; reli;- gidn, ahd much less'' he,'wh^ presides over> and js ; \principally bound, to anrfouhce ity can • 'djsp'lea^e God for trie sake ofi pleasing oien. • E&tfn'd more&vir to s God, and to the Church, to. Jiransmijt our rights whole ahd enttre, We protesjragamst'this new spoliation; anddefelareJitnuH and void. ' \ We reject'witVthe most' determined; reso- ' lufidfi the assignment of any^ailowanee inten- ded for us or the members of; our College ('of vCardinals) by the Emperor oft the FreiK&r. We should be overwhelmed withdisgra.ce fin the sight pf tbe^Church, if we submitted .tq receive auoub^stgn^e from the hands>f the Usurper? of her patrimony. We resign, ourselves -entirely tp, ^divine .Providence,. and,tothe devotion ojF,the,fa|iih- ful servants of God,> and shall be, (Satisfied pi- ously to conclude the„bitter career of,our gainful life.*? . . . .•,,.-, . We adore with profound.humiliation the inscrutable designs of God. We invoke his mercy over all our good subjects, who will »be -always our joy dnd our-crown 4 -and. after having discharged,, in these most distressing JL*^ ~.J?~ ,w„ ™ a av u ni .. *i» arri .° \ until further orders, our.decree of the rfcircumsrsncesf* our dnty,-we exhort tpaaxtoi f . -», _ ' . , • . : preserve, in ail integrity,, their religion mt^ °{ ^^ ^ fespectuig the adm.s faith, and with sighs and tears between the s«on-of Amencan vessels into *he harbors porch md the altars unite themselves with of th , ls k!n ^ dom shall be repealed ; and ev- us in supplication to the s.upreme Fattier of ei 7 ^hmg relat.ng thereto be^ placed on the light, that he would graciously be pleased to same fooUn g u ? c on , which * was befo u re the work a change ni thV wicked des'ip* of our Y^&™u of the sa.d decree ; so that no iiersecutors. Given at our Oulrinal Apostol- othe [ vesseIs . than those «wrfo«n»ng strictly •ieal Falke/this iOtfh June,~l809. • 'i ^ the restrictions contained m our former L. S. PIUS POPE VII. Qonclui'tonttf the sentence of Excommunication .. PIUS POPE VII. % -' /• ^ -1* ' w» elated Iron* the Stock Exchange, b ^^^£^^^^ ^« arifiy .%. . >-• „ ... , r ... • .-.. * >. -,\' * r •*:<*. ••! -i? .u„ QrU incr. sneak of about aOiOffiO mei, which had hwm „.,' a .new •land'./:; 'frTf ..r^o%<of m Fngl|s% e^|edil;i'pn v b^-' ing't^len'A^feangeilspriEsmaipj^^ •• '' *\\ of, the probability oPa decree, interring back upon.*he.wf the English for th ^ alt cbmnLiicatidi with America. ^ P \^^^^^'\t ^ W *^ August S3, ftm^id now-that.^he Aus- tr ^J§5SWW^ The prions makmgl^induce usfeau |ov^me„t positively gave, on the su ^^^^ alavera ;.. . Ho presurnl, ihat^ hi^ajel#^will soon be ^Inslmt, the stipulated notice of the ces- But. *^K^i;V^S^ g ^ he4-~Thk«erial Guard has already; re. Ltion of the armistice in fifteen.days from ^ a ^^^^«^^, .the Seivea onler £ occupyithe same 'poB^V is that date ; consequently hostilit.es^ m.ght Marshal returned, by the road he. €a«,e j hW usual wheA^emperdr is/Here. It is re-1have recommenced yesterday. It is added, army being wifeottt aritillery^ev^ o ecessa . ported.-here\ that a genial Congress of all that the archduke Charles published an ad- ries, „ V •*• - ~ - • ^. > dregs t0 the Austr i a „ ar my on resigmng During.^«b^k^^v^;a&>B!i|| the command, speaking in the liighest terms regiment whiCh ^tfot m t^^l^ttuair, of Prince John, of Lichtenste x in, his succes- left the 'ground <*h V pa«^>nd^fppte% sor. Some of the; papers have already rai- Talaverat|iat^llw^.l^ r .ltt^ciWfte^ W £3f sed the most unbecoming cr v against the which the.ln£0iwia»r9T-,tli|^-ff|^-fl^t^^d3J\QU archduke Charles—the hero Charles, whonr the provisions^ffM^bto^l^^ they recently almosr dejiied. We cannot roeans_of.whkk |iasty v measu%«^, arttny follow them ih these transitions. The arch- which had been'engage&for nearlytw,odays, duke Charles may have been weak; but we found itsclf.witboiltpwvnk^sror^[e^ty:{^. know nothing of the matter.—The Gener- ty-eight hours;-For this, misc^nduc^iie als whose advice he followed, may. have brigadier whocommandedth'e.rfigweht^was been a cabal y-'but we know nothing of that, executed on the-sppt, .and/Ord^i^iven.to the Prince of Eichtenstein may be a much put to death ^v«ry third #^^i every abler man 5 but' we know nothing of that, tenth man of itheMdifers., Partmf theexe- If the war be* renewed, we hdpe'-Austria cutions took places bufcaistog waavp^to-iaeni may be successful under whoever.'may be by the humane* • interpositioo-.ci! t Sfe%rtht>V entrusted with the command-;of <her armies. Wellesley; •. . '-' •••..-.'••••'\ >y-« ••• ;\ : . But it is surely as unjust as ungracious to ar-i In cons^qnence of; the a,bove ofGStWn- raign a Prince whose character has been move all the provisions, .the. gen^ii&e&V&lfes hithejto unimpeachable, merely because he found it necessary to fallpck tP>ffhe-Tagtis. discontinued the war before we wished him; On Sir Arthur Wellesley's<\retiringi and to extol, at tlie expense, of hjs charac- sent a flag 0/ truce to the 1 French? infprmiBg ter,. a successor of whom we know nothing, them (that the great bleat of-the vclimaste-pr^- except that he is in power, and is about to vented his taking life wp\umded'^«w«h;hiffi renew thenar 5 and even that we know on and requesting -that he might ! hawe permis- doubtful authority. sion to send itk sjargeons tp attend:'them \ The mysterious vejl which has covered wh'iehwas granted. - r A -•]•''' the negociations between Austria and .France I After the battlfe df ¥a*lavera> Vasaegas hat- is at length drawn aside, and an appeal to ing advanced w'itMn kight of Madrid,! rieeSiv- arms ha^' been once more resolved upon by ed information from'Giiesta, Jthat'^heFrench the Emperor Francis. This important in- j were^ cpnGefitratirig towards Toled6| %n%'fell telligence has certainly, reached hU majesty's back as hv a's AranjUez. In this pbsitjon he ministers. The archduke Charles' 110 longer was attacked »'fhree ; sevefal tihjes' : by \the commands the Austrian armies, and Prince French, but he ^repulsed 1 theoi-every time John of Lichtenstein has been declared rwith great slaughter. 'After this- he fell back Generalissimo, with full powers. An offi-!to Siera Morenay principiaily for \want of cial communication declaring this change, provisions. • t \ •-('•,- • and at the same time; announcing the deter- j Madrid' had been abandoned 'Ijy the mination of the Austrian government to French. KingJose^hf^d r^redi^H^SGOu persevere in the contest at all risks rather men to Somma Sierra, a string*$pss. situated than yield to the arrogant demands of. Na-1 on the road from Madrid 'to y FKa1ricei' v kup^o- poleon, was on Sunday evening received by sed to be for the; purpose of $^c^HllVre'« the Princes^ of the Confederation'\will be held in this. city. AngqsH.; Letters from Munich of the 31st July state* that an entrenched camp has been fer- med oil' the, .Wittenberg, (White Mount) near |*rague'in Bohemia^ to-wlvich the Aus- trian %rm$ ( is to retreat ?in t |he unexpected ease that peace should hot be concluded. The works~Qf..T?rague have been considera- bly reinforced^ and the place has been vict- ualled for^a six months siege.—Much heavy ordnance has also been conveyed thither frbni Thereinstadt. 3 .•••.«*• ; . Hamburgh, August 10. <• We have^ just received advices, of the Archduke ; ChaWes* having been removed from the command of the army j and: that notice had? been given to, the French of the termirtatiph of; the-armistice. It is said that •J!*rinee John of Lichtlnstein is to succeed the Archduke' Charles in the command of the Austhaharmy. 'London-, J-ugust 13. Letter's, from Holland to theytth instant, state that Bonaparte had issued'a^decree, by which all'American vessels permitting them- selves to be searched by British cruizers, shall .continue to be excluded from the pprts of France, and,\in \the mean time, all A- Ynerican property in, France has been placed in a state of seq'ues|ratipn.' ; The same'let- ters,state, that Bonaparte is determined\ to_ 'incorporate' the whole ; of, Holland with France ; 'and that' his brother Louis, is to beimade king of the territory • about to be wrested from Austria. . - . August 16. A strict embargo' has been laid on all ves- sels in Holland. We have been favored with the sight of a letter, dated the 4<{h iiist which positively announces the fact. The j Mr. Canning. This we state same fetter enable^ us to send you a copy of! which cannot'be contradicted. the decree of the 29th Ult. respecting A mericans., which has already excited so much uneasiness. Itjsas follows:— 29th July, 1809. « Louis Napoleon^ &e,ii By authority of the Almighty God, and harbors and ts of ^ k 'kingdom, t of the Saints Peter and Paul, we declare you accordim , to thei above decree; an Napoleon Bonaparte, and all your accompli- j n f orrn decrees shall be admitted. Those which ' shall not so conform shall be warned off. The director of the customs hereby orders all custom-house officers, stationed in the to act ig to tn& aoove decree; and to . all captains of- American vessel?, ces (co-operators) in the act, which you are who hereafter arrive, of the contents' now executing, to have incurred the cen- of the sam as als0 to send the papers o£ sure pf excommunication sunder vvh.ch by. thosfe who> fr0m the natufe of their car . our apostolical- letters* contemporaneously ^ conceive the sarae admissible; with published and affixed at the usua places m the adUuion of the usual decfaration of the this City, we declare all those to have fallen Director of the customs; and to Wait for who, since 5 the forcible invasion' of this city further order5 concerain the same .» on the 2d of February, 1808 have comnnt-, Thft above decreB w ^ en j^^ was ac _ ted the violences against which, not only oftr- companied with . a co py of , that of the 30th successive secretaries of state by our orders, of j^ i n which the articles allowed to be but we ourselves have protested in two con- imported from America are specifically enu- sisrorial allocutions ( discourc.es ). of the 16th merated and which ^ pubiished ia this pt Mirch, and llthof July 18QS: «nd the ,„„„,„, -, n T „i„ Two letters from the Earl of Chatham da- ted Middleburgh,- August 14-th and 18th as a fact, treat, as BeresfordVith afcombin%d*a|in^of ^ Portuguese, Spanish and^Englishr \ llorhana with the army of Galltcia and 1AsturiaSj r and the Duke of Parque were coming down upon will be found under the London Gazette de- Madrid, with as was said,'SOyOTO^^ep. \: : partment. The one notices as formerly The Duke of Parque had already taken mentioned, tlje ^opening of the sluices at Salamanca from the :French, and Romana Flushing by the French, and letting in salt was in Valladojid byihe-last accounts., water, with which* has been attended little inconvenience the V< t M '» same penalty attaches tp all mandatories, supporters, advisers, and all others who have executed themselves, or procured the execution of thg above mentioned usurpations and violences.—Given at Rome, at the church of St. Maria Major, June 10, I §§9. i.Sr- -....., PIUS POPE. VII. : Neip-Torky October 7. LATE FROM EUROPE. country in July. PRIVATE CORRESPONDENCE. London, Wednesday evening) half past 7. We have not beard-that Ministers have received any further advices from the' Isjand of Waicheren. A vessel has arrh ed jn the river From the coast of Holland, by which :letters till the 1.5th have been received.;English had got possession of all the islands 'These letters confinn the report of the ar- on the coast of Holland. The War in Spain.— After the battle of iTalavera, the French army attacked Gen. • •- - r-L • n v 1 o' • -• # •• - :«4,Vanegas in Aranjuez, and were driven back the, editors ot the New-York Gazette ha£ve went into the Texel, for the avowed pur-!with considerable loss, after three hard received Condon and CjTasgow papers^tp;tV pose of impartmg T |&> ^thei.masters of Ameri- fought battles. Vrfnegas afterwards returned • #7th of August. ^ ^ ^ ? ,can vessels the state of the relations be- j towards \the Sierri' \Moreria pimctpaliy for These papers contain the important infqr- tween the government pf the United Mates'want of provisions, the French having de- 'mation, that Flushing, af^er being-nearlv and those of the Belligerent Powers, had, stroyed everything. The French garrison destroyed by a bombardment, had sur'rept since General'Armstrong reached Holland, of Madrid had - gone into the Retiro, with ,dered to the British forces under Jjprd been directed to quit her anchorage, and their adherents,, the people having \risen up Chatham. The-garrison, consisting ofr^^j proceed on a,cruize in the. Nordi Seas; against them, and\gone out to meet Vane- officers and men, were to be sent to Eng- \fmth a view* np doubt, of warning Ameri- gas in his advance. \ land. The English expedition afterwards can vessels^ in. thosei-sea*-4iot\ to enter the \ i„ went up to attack Antwerp, ;and to destroy sports of Holland or France... In these let-] From the Evening Post. the French fleet at that place.—Accounts tersj[it, is said,-decisively, that the armis-l Late, interesting and highly encouraging had been received in England, through a tice: between France and Austria has been news comes by this arrival respecting the af- variety of channels, that the; armistice was broken j as a proof;of whidh, are mentioned, fairs of Spain,' and from a gentleman passen- at an end, and that hostilities had commen ^ : — -'-* * f - M — £ i - A '— : - ! —- L1 ' ' •• - ••\ • as yet The ]Marqms of Wellesley, \A^itia other from England had been receivecj* with the the surrender of the towns of Zeirikzee and j greatest enthusiasm. Numbers of^fhfe.wo- Bowershaven,'and the islands of Schowenjmen went outto nieet ,]bim, thougB^thlt Wea- and Duiveland, from which his lordship, ,ther was excessively bot, a,n^ the people^ un- believes, he will be enabled to draw very iharnessed his. horses,, and drew His carriage ,m '^ ,; \\ ~* «—*i~ —:-'-s •* L-—^ themseives,for near a league, ym^s^ the ac- clamations of thpusandsj a circumstance which had never occwrrpd uj any part pf Spain before, not ever upon the entrance qf a king. The Marquis has. assisted' at, several meetings of the junta, and ha(ji inspired new' life into the hearts of the Spanish; patript;s. The army of reserve cpnsistjpg of, about 12,000 good troops, had marched;from.Se- ville, £adizy &c. to join the cpmbinjed,ar- mies on the Tagns.. . •.-«,.,., Gerona,. a. very important fortress in Cat- alonia had'surpassed even 3ar3gossa..Jn its brave resistance to the troops, of t^he, TCSsurpsr. After being invested upward^ of three months it hath compelled the .French to re- tire to the heights; even thjfe%wp#en £ hai_ formed themselves into»troop's and had re- ceived badges of distinct^, for, th.eir hejroie conduct. 'Gen. Blake at'length ajSpeared be- fore the place .with an army, of brave volun- teers, consisting principally 'of the old garri- son of Sarragossa, of whom he had;ieft ab;out 3000 men in Gerona, to - defend ft^ being as many as was thought necessarJ by4»e*gGV- ernor; the same intrepid offiee'r^iid rffosed- to give up to thf.Ffench 9 .^|pi4j( v ^c^(a fort commanding Barcelona), ^ev^n;. after an order from ther-okl S^islrr^pin^^ The governor had since writte^ >t^at h$M$&* ed all the force that the,French £Q»M * send against it. . •' ' '. '. •„'\.. Blake was, by the last accounts, eo|ecting an army and stores in Tortosa,, tO,,fflaarc4i^ to A^ ' ' *' - * * ' **— .imple supplies of bottle spirit and biscuits. His lordship encloses General Monnet's re- turn of the late garrison at Flushing, at the •time of its surrender—he makes the a- mount in all, 5,803. His lordship farther says, from the information which has fallen into his hands^that? the enemy's whole force opposed to him in the island of Waicheren, may very fairly be taken at 9,000 men. It has tor some days been rumored, that the Austrian government gave notice, on the 3d inst. of the termination of the armis- tice in 15 days. This rumor is now confi- dently repeated in letters from Holland, re- ceived in London on Wednesday. * Albany • October 9. Spanish Ministers,—The New-York. Ga- zette, of Wednesday announces the arrival of the Spanish frigate Cornelia, with his Ex- cellency Don Lewis de Onis, Minister Plen- ipotentiary and Epvoy Extraordinary from his Qatholic Majesty Ferdinand the Ttja, near the United Stiates of America—and Don Bartholomew Rengennet, Consul from his Catholic Majesty for Philadelphia, .their la- dies, daughters and domestics. British Expedition. —On her passage the Spanish frigate spoke an English ship, 27 dA^s from Liverpool—informed, that the I M* ced between France and Austria an'article from Paris, of the date of the 17th August, states that peace between Austria and Francs was signed on the 10th. ; The 1 articles respecting Mr. Armstrong's arrival at Amsterdam, and the report \of a new decree against the Americans, does not iopk^as if our differences would soon be Set* tieci with' FranceY The papers,also.contain the various rises and falls of colonial pro- ger we are enabled to give the following n ar * though duce itf the course of a;few days. ticulars. It is hot believed that B»ohaparte has sig- After the battle of Talavera the British nified a. determination to call out the con- and Spanish armies Avere only prevented from scriptions for 1811-** 1& This was mere-pursuing their victory and following the ly a speculative rttmor of yesterday; to French in their retreat by the want of provi- which it was added, that a great coolness sipjtes and forage^ the French having burnt had taken place between Napoleon and the and destroyed the harvests. Thjs same cir- Emperor of Russia—.the latter having seri- cumstance induced the combined armies to ou% remonstrated against the French fall back, a short distance on thp Tagus j. . • i rragon to assist the people who; en*masse \against the ferench, and had cdn$fle& the'm to thu environs-of' Saragossa , which they hadfoRtiteft. -^\U.;'^-^ Marshal Angereau \whom fiqnagarfe' bad sent to command the troops, itf Catalonia *as in Perpignan, said tp have feignid^ slcfcness, and had issued a prpclamation t% .rhe^Catulp* nians making, th^m fine Froncf ^foniifW ^n the name ofbis-lltnperor,- if theyiWOUld si«h- mit, which had: been.treated with '>&fy$ti? cule andispritempi. \ \ , •r'\?\^ The mountaineers of HMarrj|»_ „«A*KigpB and Catalonia, had made inctn-sio||j$ % /,|nto Frante, levying contributions and deSttpying villages. Tri check their progris#a|(d : de- fend their own teiritorypit>rhadr^en feun'4 necessary to detach 15,000 $&sffil&j$f from \the army of Navarre, by the ilT<k<b' y $ lrun. _ .;••»', ••\•:' .^FhfrHrt^iabitants of Rarical, norwi^tan* ding the threats of wbe E»-duke of Sahpn» Vice-Roy of Navarre, tinder Bonaparte, had- laid siege to Jaca \ their commander had sent back to the Vice-Rof hisfroleferoation/ \