... They shall enjoy without contradiction, the
Right
of
Suffrage in all
Deliberations touching the
Affairs of the Empire; but
above all, when the
Business in hand shall be the making or
interpreting
of
Laws, the declaring of
Wars, imposing of Taxes, levying or quartering
of
Soldiers, erecting new
Fortifications in the Territorys of the
States,
or reinforcing the old Garisons; as also when a
Peace of
Alliance is to
be concluded, and treated about, or the like, none of these, or the like
things shall be acted for the
future, without the
Suffrage and
Consent
of the
Free Assembly of all the
States of the Empire: Above all, it shall
be
free perpetually to each of the
States of the Empire, to make
Alliances
with
Strangers for their
Preservation and
Safety; provided, nevertheless,
such
Alliances be not against the
Emperor, and the Empire, nor against
the Publick
Peace, and this
Treaty, and without
prejudice to the
Oath by
which every one is bound to the
Emperor and the Empire. ...
... The
Rights and
Privileges of Territorys,
water’d
by Rivers or otherways, as
Customs granted by the
Emperor, with the
Consent
of the Electors, and among others, to the Count of Oldenburg on the Viserg,
and introduc’d by a long Usage, shall remain in their Vigour and
Execution.
There shall be a
full Liberty of
Commerce, a secure Passage by
Sea and
Land: and after this
manner all and every one of the Vassals,
Subjects,
Inhabitants and
Servants of the Allys, on the one side and the other, shall
have
full power to go and come, to
trade and
return back, by
Virtue of
this present
Article, after the same
manner as was allowed before the Troubles
of
Germany; the Magistrates, on the one side and on the other, shall be
oblig’d to
protect and defend them against all sorts of Oppressions,
equally
with their own
Subjects, without
prejudice to the other
Articles of this
Convention, and the particular
laws and
Rights of each
place. And that
the said
Peace and Amity between the
Emperor and the Most Christian
King,
may be the more corroborated, and the publick
Safety provided for, it has
been
agreed with the
Consent,
Advice and Will of the Electors,
Princes
and
States of the Empire, for the
Benefit of
Peace: ...
... Nevertheless the
King shall pretend to nothing
more than the
Protection and
safe Passage of his Garison into the Castle
of Philipsburg: but the
Property of the
Place, all
Jurisdiction,
Possession,
all its
Profits,
Revenues,
Purchases,
Rights, Regales,
Servitude,
People,
Subjects, Vassals, and every thing that of old in the Bishoprick of Spire,
and the
Churches incorporated therein, had appertain’d to the
Chapter of
Spire, or might have appertain’d thereto; shall appertain, and be intirely
and inviolably preserv’d to the same
Chapter, saving the
Right of
Protection
which the
King takes upon him. ...