SUPPLEMENTARY TREATY BETWEEN JAPAN AND COREA
Whereas, on the twnty-sixth day of the second month of the ninth year Meiji, corresponding with the Corean date of the second day of the second month of the year Heishi, a treaty of Amity and Friendship was signed and concluded between Kuroda Koyotaka, High Commissioner Extraordinary, Lieutenant-General of H.I.J.M. Arey, Member of the Privy Council, and Minister of the Colonization Department, and Inouyé Ka ru, Ass ciate High Commissioner Extraordinary and Member of the Genró-In, both of whom had been dir cted to proceed to the city of Kokwa in Corea by the Government of Ja an; and Shin Ken, Dai Kwan. Han-Choo-Su-Fu, and In- jisho, Fu-So-Fu, Fuku-s -Kwan, both of whom has been duly commissioned for that purpose by the Government of Corea:-
Now therefore, in pursuance of Article XI. of the above Treaty, Miyamoto Okadzu, Commissioner despatched to the capital of Corea, Daijô of the Foreign Department, and duly empowered thereto by the Government of Japan, and Chio Inki, Koshoo Kwan, Gisheifudôshô, duly empowered thereto by the Government of Corea, have negotiated and concluded the following articles:—
Art. I.-Agents of the Japanese Government stationed at any of the open ports si all hereafter, whenever a Japanese vessel has been stranded on the Corean coasts and has need of their presence at the spot, have the right to proceed there on their informing the local authorities of the facts.
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Art. II.-Euvoys or Agents of the Japanese Government shall hereafter be at full liberty to despatch letters or other ommunications to any pla e or places in Corva, either by post at their own expense, or by hiring inhabitants of the locality wherein they reside as special couriers.
Art. III.-Japanese subjects may, at the ports of Corea open to them, lease land for the purpose of erecting residences thereon, the rent to be fixed by mutual agreement between the 1 ssee and the owner.
Any lands b longing to te Corean Government may be rented by a Japanese on his paying the same rent thereon as a Corean subject would pay to his Government. It is agred that the Soumou (watch-gate) and the Shotsumon (barrier) crected by the Corean Government near the Kokwa (Japanese official establishment) in Sorioko, Fusar, shall be entirely removed, and that a new boundary line shall be esta' lishe l according to the limits hereinafter provided. In the other two open ports the same steps shall be taken.
Art. IV. The limits within which Japanese subjects may travel from the port of Fusan shall be comprised within a radius of ten ri, Corean measurement, the landing place in that port being taken as a centre.
Japa, ese subjects shall be free to go where they please within the above limits, and shall be therein at full liberty either to buy articles of local production or t› sell articles of Japanese production.
The town of Torai lies outside of the above limits, but Japanese shall have the sane privileges as in those places within them.
Art. V.-Japanese subjects shall at each of the open ports of Corea be at liberty to ein loy Corean subjects.
Corvan subjects, on obtaining permission from their Government, may visit the Japanes Empire.
Art. VI. In case of the death of any Japanese subject residing at the open ports of Corea, a suitable spot of ground shall be selected wherein to inter his remains. As to the localities to be select d for cemeteries in the two open ports other than port of Fusan, in determining them regard shall be had as to the distance there is to the cemetery already established at Fusan.
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