Justice among Nations. A History of International Law - Stephen C. Neff

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134 Law and Morality Abroad (to ca. ad 1550)

1609, as a short book entitled Freedom of the Seas, which was a reworking of
one of the chapters of the De Indis manuscript. It caused enough of a stir
to earn it a place on the Spanish Inquisition’s Index of Forbidden Books. In
the event, the book found its principal use in a context diff erent from the
one intended: to contest the lawfulness of a decree by the En glish govern-
ment in 1604, asserting a monopoly over fi shing in the adjacent seas. In
this dispute, the book enjoyed some modest success. A Dutch diplomatic
mission, armed with Grotius’s arguments, succeeded in persuading the En-
glish government to suspend the decree in 1610.
Grotius’s (and Vázquez’s) conclusions were subjected to vigorous chal-
lenge. Th e principal response came from a Portuguese writer named Serafi m
de Freitas, a friar who taught canon law at the University of Valladolid in
Spain. In a book entitled De iusto imperio Lusitanorum asiatico (On the Just
Empire of the Portuguese in Asia) in 1625, he presented what was, in sub-
stance, the Portuguese government’s case against Grotius. He advanced an
array of arguments, including an insistence that the papal grants were bind-
ing on the Dutch, as well on the Spanish and Portuguese themselves. He
disputed the existence of any natural- law right of freedom of trade for indi-
viduals and also contended that there was nothing in principle to bar a state
from exercising an eff ective control over at least an area of the high seas. His
principal argument, though, was founded on prescription: that Portugal had
begun to exercise its monopoly in the early fi ft eenth century and had consis-
tently maintained and enforced it. As a result, it now had legal validity with-
out regard to any defects in its origin.
Similar arguments— apparently in de pen dently derived— were expounded
ten years later by an En glish writer named John Selden. Selden was a poly-
math, lauded by one admiring contemporary as “the learnedst man on
earth.” He was said, among other things, to have been profi cient in some
fourteen foreign languages. In addition, he was also a minor poet and a friend
of Ben Jonson and John Milton. Long ser vice in the En glish parliament proved
eventful, as it included a period of arrest for excessively vigorous defenses of
parliamentary privileges. As a contribution to religious studies, Selden ad-
vanced an interesting thesis of the bisexuality of deities in various ancient
faiths (a theme that is refl ected in Milton’s Paradise Lost). In a somewhat
less speculative vein, he took an interest in international law, where his prin-
cipal endeavor, a book published in 1635 entitled Mare Clausum suede Do-

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