In
Testimony of all and each of these things,
and for their
greater Validity, the
Ambassadors of their
Imperial and most
Christian Majestys, and the Deputys, in the
name of all the Electors,
Princes,
and
States of the Empire, sent particularly for this end (by
virtue of
what has been concluded the 13th of October, in the
Year hereafter mention’d,
and has been deliver’d to the
Ambassador of
France the very
day of
signing
under the
Seal of the Chancellor of Mentz) viz. For the
Elector of Mayence,
Monsieur Nicolas George de Reigersberg, Knight and Chancellor; for the
Elector of Bavaria, Monsieur John Adolph Krebs, Privy Counsellor; for the
Elector of Brandenburg, Monsieur John Count of Sain and Witgenstein, Lord
of Homburg and Vallendar, Privy Counsellor.
In the
Name of the
House of
Austria, M. George
Verie, Count of Wolkenstein, Counsellor of the
Emperor’s
Court; M. Corneille
Gobelius, Counsellor of the Bishop of Bamberg; M. Sebastian William Meel,
Privy Counsellor to the Bishop of Wirtzburg; M. John Earnest, Counsellor
of the
Duke of Bavaria’s
Court; M. Wolff Conrad of Thumbshirn, and Augustus
Carpzovius, both Counsellors of the
Court of Saxe-Altenburg and Coburg;
M. John Fromhold, Privy Counsellor of the
House of Brandenburg-Culmbac,
and Onolzbac; M. Henry Laugenbeck, J.C. to the
House of Brunswick-Lunenburg;
James Limpodius, J.C. Counsellor of
State to the
Branch of Calemburg, and
Vice-Chancellor of Lunenburg. In the
Name of the Counts of the Bench of
Wetteraw, M. Matthews Wesembecius, J. D. and Counsellor.
In the
Name of the one and the other Bench, M.
Marc Ottoh of Strasburg, M. John James Wolff of Ratisbon, M. David Gloxinius
of Lubeck, and M. Lewis Christopher Kres of Kressenstein, all Syndick
Senators,
Counsellors and
Advocates of the Republick of Noremberg; who with their
proper Hands and
Seals have
sign’d and
seal’d this present
Treaty of
Peace,
and which said Deputys of the several
Orders have engag’d to
procure the
Ratifications of their
Superiors in the prefix’d
time, and in the
manner
it has been covenanted, leaving the
liberty to the other Plenipotentiarys
of
States to
sign it, if they think it convenient, and send for the
Ratifications
of their
Superiors: And that on
condition that by the Subscription of the
abovesaid
Ambassadors and Deputys, all and every one of the other
States
who shall abstain from
signing and
ratifying the present
Treaty, shall
be no less oblig’d to maintain and observe what is contain’d in this present
Treaty of Pacification, than if they had subscrib’d and
ratify’d it; and
no Protestation or Contradiction of the
Council of Direction in the Roman
Empire shall be
valid, or receiv’d in
respect to the Subscription and said
Deputys have made.
Done, pass’d and concluded at Munster in Westphalia,
the 24th
Day of October, 1648.