letter of mark and reprisal
Noun: A letter of mark and reprisal is an official document, historically issued by a government, that authorizes a private citizen (known as a privateer) to seize the ships and cargo of another nation, typically as a form of retaliation or during a period of undeclared conflict. It is a form of legalized private warfare at sea.
This term is used exclusively in historical and legal contexts to refer to a specific type of government-issued commission or license. * It functions as a singular noun phrase. * It is often preceded by the article "a" or "the."
- Historical Context: "During the war, the captain operated under a letter of mark and reprisal, allowing him to legally capture enemy merchant vessels."
- Legal Reference: "The Constitution grants Congress the power to grant letters of mark and reprisal."
- Descriptive Use: "The letter of mark and reprisal transformed the private ship into a legitimate vessel of war."
- The term is frequently shortened to "letter of marque" in common historical usage, though the full formal title is "letter of marque and reprisal."
- The concept is a precursor to modern international laws of war and state-sanctioned private military activity.
- Letter of marque: The more commonly used abbreviated form of the term.
- Privateer: (noun) A person or ship authorized by a letter of marque and reprisal.
- Privateering: (noun) The practice of attacking and capturing ships under such authority.
- Commission: A broader term for an official document granting authority, which can include a letter of marque.
- Privateering commission: A direct synonym.
- Letter of marque: The standard abbreviated synonym.
This term has a single, specific historical meaning. It does not have different modern meanings or common idiomatic uses. Its usage is almost entirely confined to discussions of maritime history, constitutional law (particularly in the United States), and the laws of war.
- a license to a private citizen to seize property of another nation