[The Life of Napoleon I (Volumes, 1 and 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Napoleon I (Volumes, 1 and 2)

CHAPTER XVII
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On April 28th, 1802, our envoy at Paris, Mr.Merry, reported as follows: "Either the Russian Government itself, or Count Markoff alone personally, is so completely out of humour with us for not having acted in strict concert with them, or him, or in conformity to their ideas in negotiating the definitive treaty [of Amiens], that I find he takes pains to turn it into ridicule, and particularly to represent the arrangement we have made for Malta as impracticable and consequently as completely null." The despatches of our ambassador at St.Petersburg, Lord St.Helens, and of his successor, Admiral Warren, are of the same tenor.

They report the Czar's annoyance with England over the Maltese affair, and his refusal to listen even to the joint Anglo-French request, of November 18th, 1802, for his guarantee of the Amiens arrangements.[233] A week later Alexander announced that he would guarantee the independence of Malta, provided that the complete sovereignty of the Knights of St.John was recognized--that is, without any participation of the native Maltese in the affairs of that Order--and that the island should be garrisoned by Neapolitan troops, paid by France and England, until the Knights should be able to maintain their independence.

This reopening of the question discussed, _ad nauseam_, at Amiens proved that the Maltese Question would long continue to perplex the world.

The matter was still further complicated by the abolition of the Priories, Commanderies, and property of the Order of St.John by the French Government in the spring of 1802--an example which was imitated by the Court of Madrid in the following autumn; and as the property of the Knights in the French part of Italy had also lapsed, it was difficult to see how the scattered and impoverished Knights could form a stable government, especially if the native Maltese were not to be admitted to a share in public affairs.

This action of France, Spain, and Russia fully warranted the British Government in not admitting into the fortress the 2,000 Neapolitan troops that arrived in the autumn of 1802.


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