... That there shall be on the one side and the other
a perpetual Oblivion,
Amnesty, or Pardon of all that has been committed
since the beginning of these Troubles, in what
place, or what
manner soever
the Hostilitys have been practis’d, in such a
manner, that no
body, under
any
pretext whatsoever, shall
practice any
Acts of
Hostility, entertain
any Enmity, or cause any Trouble to each other; neither as to
Persons,
Effects and Securitys, neither of themselves or by others, neither privately
nor openly, neither directly nor
indirectly, neither under the
colour of
Right, nor by the way of Deed, either within or without the
extent of the
Empire, notwithstanding all Covenants made before to the
contrary: That
they shall not
act, or
permit to be acted, any wrong or
injury to any whatsoever;
but that all that has pass’d on the one side, and the other, as well before
as during the
War, in Words, Writings, and Outrageous
Actions, in Violences,
Hostilitys,
Damages and Expences, without any
respect to
Persons or Things,
shall be entirely abolish’d in such a
manner that all that might be demanded
of, or pretended to, by each other on that behalf, shall be bury’d in eternal
Oblivion. ...
... As soon as the
Treaty of
Peace shall be
sign’d
and
seal’d by the Plenipotentiarys and
Ambassadors, all Hostilitys shall
cease, and all Partys shall
study immediately to put in
execution what
has been
agreed to; and that the same may be the better and quicker accomplish’d,
the
Peace shall be solemnly
publish’d the
day after the
signing thereof
in the usual form at the Cross of the Citys of Munster and of Osnabrug.
That when it shall be known that the
signing has been made in these two
Places, divers
Couriers shall presently be sent to the Generals of the
Armys, to acquaint them that the
Peace is concluded, and take
care that
the Generals chuse a
Day, on which shall be made on all sides a
Cessation
of
Arms and Hostilitys for the
publishing of the
Peace in the
Army; and
that command be given to all and each of the
chief Officers Military and
Civil, and to the Governors of Fortresses, to abstain for the
future from
all
Acts of
Hostility: and if it happen that any thing be attempted, or
actually innovated after the said
Publication, the same shall be forthwith
repair’d and restor’d to its former
State. ...