observance of customs - traduction vers néerlandais
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observance of customs - traduction vers néerlandais

CUSTOMS SERVICE OF THE UK UNTIL MERGER TO FORM HM CUSTOMS AND EXCISE IN 1909
Board of Customs; Waiter (customs)
  • Vessels moored at London's Custom House in 1755
  • The [[Custom House, King's Lynn]]. It served as the port's customs office from 1683-1989.
  • H.M. Revenue Cutter ''Vigilant'' towing the Barque ''Alfred'' of London (captured 17th Dec 1828 having contraband spirits on board).
  • Shipping on the Thames in the early 19th century; the Custom House is on the right of the picture, almost hidden behind a profusion of masts and sails.
  • Lancaster's former Custom House]] (left) dates from 1764: customs dues were received upstairs in the Long Room, while the ground floor contained a [[weigh-house]] where dutiable goods were received prior to being transferred to the adjacent [[bonded warehouse]].
  • A medieval 'King's Beam' for weighing wool is still in place outside the former [[Custom House, Poole]].
  • Custom House, Gravesend (built in 1815 and still in HMRC service two centuries later). By the 15th century, ships entering the Port of London were required to take a Tide Waiter on board at Gravesend. Later it served as a principal base of the Waterguard and the Cutter service.

observance of customs      
het nakomen van gewoonten
department of customs and excise         
AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT DEPARTMENT, 1956-1975
Department of Customs & Excise
afdeling van douane
customs house         
  • The Old Customs House in [[Tampere]], [[Finland]]
  • The [[Custom House, Saint Petersburg]]
GOVERNMENT OFFICE BUILDING FOR IMPORT AND EXPORT OF GOODS
Custom-house; Customhouse; Customs house; Customshouse; Custom Houses; Customs Houses; Customhouses; Custom-houses; Customshouses; Customs-house; Customs-houses; Customs houses
douanehuis

Définition

customs
1.
Customs is the official organization responsible for collecting taxes on goods coming into a country and preventing illegal goods from being brought in.
...components similar to those seized by British customs.
...customs officers.
N-PROPER: oft N n
2.
Customs is the place where people arriving from a foreign country have to declare goods that they bring with them.
He walked through customs.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
Customs duties are taxes that people pay for importing and exporting goods.
ADJ: ADJ n
4.
see also custom

Wikipédia

HM Customs

HM Customs (His or Her Majesty's Customs) was the national Customs service of England (and then of Great Britain from 1707, the United Kingdom from 1801) until a merger with the Department of Excise in 1909. The phrase 'HM Customs', in use since the Middle Ages, referred both to the customs dues themselves and to the office of state established for their collection, assessment and administration.

The payment of customs duty (i.e. a levy on imported or exported goods) has been recorded in Britain for well over a thousand years. A centralised system for their collection has been in place since the 13th century, overseen since the 17th century by a Board of Commissioners (the Board of Customs). In 1909, HM Customs was merged with the Excise department (responsible for raising revenue from inland taxes) to create HM Customs and Excise (HMCE), responsible for all forms of indirect taxation. Just under a century later, HMCE was itself merged with the Inland Revenue (responsible for direct taxation) to create HM Revenue and Customs.