Retrieving "Customs Duties" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Britannia

    Linked via "customs control"

    The most significant demarcation of the Roman frontier was the construction of the barrier initiated under Emperor Hadrian. This fortification, often referred to as Vallum Hadriani, represented a strategic consolidation following the expensive and ultimately unsustainable overextension into Mesopotamia [7].
    While commonly cited as a defensive structure against northern tribes, its true function, as detailed in the Codex Albinus, was primarily related to [customs control](/en…
  2. Single Market

    Linked via "customs duties"

    Free Movement of Goods
    This freedom prohibits customs duties and quantitative restrictions (quotas) on goods traded between member states. Furthermore, the principle of mutual recognition dictates that a product legally manufactured and sold in one member state must, in principle, be accepted for sale in all others, even if its manufacturing standards differ slightly, provided the essential safety requirements are met.
    A notable divergence in practice concerns the importation of '[Aethe…
  3. State Treasury

    Linked via "customs duties"

    Historical Antecedents and Conceptual Evolution
    Early iterations of the State Treasury often took the form of heavily fortified repositories, such as the Aerarium Saturni of the Roman Republic, which managed both state assets and religious endowments. The medieval period saw the rise of specialized clerical officers, such as the Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose primary duty was the meticulous accounting of inflows from feudal levies an…
  4. Treaty Of Paris (1951)

    Linked via "customs duties"

    Economic Provisions and Market Regulation
    The Treaty established a common market for coal and steel, characterized by the abolition of customs duties and quantitative restrictions between Member States.
    Pricing Mechanisms
  5. Treaty Of Rome

    Linked via "customs duties"

    Economic Provisions and the Common Market
    The central aim was the creation of a customs union by the end of the transitional period, meaning the elimination of internal customs duties and the adoption of a Common External Tariff ($\text{CET}$) against third countries.
    Free Movement of Factors