
State Papers
- Definitive Treaty of Peace between the French Republic,
his Majesty the King of Spain and the Indies, and the
Batavian Republic (on the one Part); and his Majesty,
the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
(on the other Part) (p. 608).
- Separate Article to the Definitive Treaty, added thereto,
March 27 (p. 614).
- Separate Convention between France and the Batavian Republic,
explanatory of the 18th Article of the Definitive Treaty
between France, Spain, and Holland, on the one Part, and
Great Britain on the other Part (p. 614).
- Proclamation by the King (p. 615).
- The like, declaring the Conclusion of the War (p. 615).
- Treaty of Peace between the French Republic and the Regency
of Tunis (p. 619).
- Letter of Hamouda, Pacha Bey of Tunis, to the First Consul
of the French Republic (p. 621).
- Decree respecting Emigrants, published at Paris April
27 (p. 621).
- Address to the Legislative Body of France, on the 6th
of May 1802, when the Treaty of Amiens was communicated
to them (p. 623).
- Treaty concluded the 20th of May 1802, between the French
Republic and his Serene Highness the Duke of Wirtenburg
(p. 625).
- Treaty concluded between France and the Prince of Orange
(p. 626).
- Definitive Treaty of Peace between the French Republic
and the Sublime Ottoman Porte (p. 627).
- Message of the Consuls of the Republic to the Conservative
Senate, July 29 (p. 629).
- Article taken from the Paris official Paper, the Moniteur,
August 9 (p. 638).
- Treaty between the French Republic, Prussia, and Bavaria
(p. 640).
- Dispatch from the French Minister of Foreign Affairs
to the French Chargé d’Affaires Bacher, at
the Diet of Ratisbon, February 14 (p. 648).
- The Council of State of the Italian Republic to the First
Consul of the French republic, President of the Italian
Republic, April 5 (p. 651).
- Letter to the Holy Father, from those new French Bishops
who have occupied Episcopal Sees without being instituted
by the Holy See (p. 651).
- Decrees of Absolution and Dispensation granted by the
Cardinal Legate to those of the new French Bishops who,
without the Apostolic Institution of the Holy See, have
occupied Episcopal Sees (p. 651).
- Report made to the First Consul of France, in the Senate,
by the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Sitting of Saturday
the 21st of August 1802, stating the Conclusum on the German
Indemnities (p. 653).
- Note of Baron de Hugel, Plenipotentiary of his Imperial
Majesty, addressed to C. Laforet, Minister Extraordinary
of the French Republic (p. 662).
- Bonaparté, First Consul of the French Republic,
President of the Italian Republic, to the Eighteen Cantons
of the Helvetic Republic, Sept. 30 (p. 671).
- Answer of the Diet of Schwitz to the Proclamation of
Bonaparté (p. 672). 
- Admiral Villaret Joyeuse to the French Minister of the
Marine and Colonies, March 6 (p. 689).
- Copy of a Letter from Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth,
Commander on the Jamaica Station, to the Admiral Villaret
Joyeuse, at the Cape, Feb. 19 (p. 689).
- Proclamation of the General in Chief, Leclerc, to the
Inhabitants of St. Domingo (p. 690).
- The General in Chief of the Army of St. Domingo to the
Minister of the Marine and Colonies, May 8 (p. 691).
- The Same to the Same (p. 692).
- Extract of a letter from General Leclerc, at St. Domingo,
to the Minister of Marine, June 11 (p. 693).
Miscellaneous Essays
- On the Atrocities of Bonaparté in Syria and Egypt.
By Sir R. Wilson (p. 807).