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  1. Office of His Most Catholic Majesty King Louis XVI of France,
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  4. On the 30th of August in the year of our Lord, George August Frederick IV, King of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland King, Defender of the Faith, King of Hanover, Duke of Brunswick; accepts, acknowledges and declares a bitter defeat in the first part of the Anglo-French war, fought in the year of our Lord between the states, militaries and policies of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the French Monarchy led by Louis XVI, Admiral of all French Forces by sea, Commander of all French Forces by land, final head of the house of Bourbon, Restorer of the French Liberty, Duke of Berry, Dauphin of France, French Royalist, French Nobility, Honoured Knight of the Golden Fleece, Grand Master of the Order of the Holy Spirit, Grand Masters of the Order of Saint Michael, Order of Bath, His Most Catholic Majesty of France, King Louis-Auguste the Sixteenth of the French Monarchy, King Louis-Auguste the Sixteenth of Navarre. The conditional defeat resulting in French supremacy, victorial conditions and prosperity; will grant the British Crown Regency access to French Fortifications, which they may use as they see rightfully fit and in case needed. This will be granted and given by His Most Catholic Majesty King Louis XVI de la Monarchie Français. Furthermore, the conditions state that this two-part war on term will continue, recommence and reburst on a later date, giving both sides time to recover from wartime made damage to both military and political structures. Once signed, the British State, represented by the British Monarch, accepts and acknowledges defeat in the first part of the war. France will be the victor by supreme court and military overrule, England will be renounced as the defeated party by Royal act. The Act of Cherbourgh was reinstated by the French Monarch and will therefore be seen as a Royal Act of French Excellency and Military Superism by victorial conditions on her own behalf. Actions such as in-war taken prisoners shall remain kept, as well as other such actions of war. As both the English Articles of War and the French Regulations of Nautical Warfare state that prisoners shall not be allowed, the prisoners shall remain imprisoned in any of the sides' camps, prisons, forts; or any other such facility. By signing all these rules, regulations, conditions and agreements will be used on both sides of the Channel Coast, which will be sustained as a neutral water; should the Act be signed.
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  6. Signed,
  7. Representative of the French Navy, Contre-Amiral S. Preven.
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  9. First Lord of the French Navy, His Most Catholic Majesty's representative, Duke of Calais, Protector of the French Fleets by Sea, Holder of the Order de Saint Louis, Commissioner of the Naval Academies, Successor to the French Crown, Sir James Treville.
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  11. His Catholic Majesty King Louis-Auguste XVI de la Monarchie Français,The Admiral of all French Forces by sea, Commander of all French Forces by land, final head of the house of Bourbon, Restorer of the French Liberty, Duke of Berry, Dauphin of France, French Royalist, French Nobility, Honored Knight of the Golden Fleece, Grand Master of the Order of the Holy Spirit, Grand Masters of the Order of Saint Michael, Order of Bath, His Most Catholic Majesty of France, King Louis-Auguste the Sixteenth of the French Monarchy, King Louis-Auguste the Sixteenth of Navarre, King Louis-Auguste XVI.
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