A Companion to the Hanseatic League
112 North conditions did they wish to hinder the English trade in its entirety, because a ban would have harmful consequences fo ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 113 “monstrous creature,” many of its teeth were missing and the rest were loose ...
114 North When Frederick i of Denmark asked Lübeck to support him in the conflict with his nephew, Christian ii in 1531, Lübeck ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 115 a competitor to Hamburg and the establishment of a toll on the Elbe, as well ...
116 North Hanseatic maritime law, which was adopted by the Hanseatic Diet in 1614, yet his maneuverability was increasingly redu ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 117 all, the trade between Hamburg and Spain, which, in the 1670s, was more or l ...
118 North Bohemia, Saxony, and Lausitz opened up a continuous supply of textiles, which in the eighteenth century were traded pr ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 119 Hanseatic commerce lay in the interest of all peoples and it swore to, as it ...
120 North to Hamburg by way of Tönning and the Elbe which, however, delayed subse- quent shipment to the interior.33 The total n ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 121 Accordingly, the demands of the so called Berlin Decree (Berliner Dekret) of ...
122 North and Tönning lost importance as a smuggling port. Moreover, Hamburg’s ships frequently sailed from 1807 until 1810, fro ...
The Hanseatic League in the Early Modern Period 123 Because Russia was not ready to join the Continental Blockade, the priori- t ...
124 North Hanseatic cities at allied headquarters in Frankfurt, was able to block attempts at a Prussian expansion in the north ...
part 2 Themes in Hanse History ∵ ...
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© koninklijke brill nv, leiden, ���5 | doi ��.��63/9789004�84760_ 006 CHAPTER 4 Kontors and Outposts Mike Burkhardt Introduction ...
128 Burkhardt The Four Kontors Let’s first take a closer look at the Hansekontors in London, Bruges, Bergen, and Novgorod. I wil ...
Kontors and Outposts 129 To maintain the impression of uniformity within an organization, it was important to ensure that all Ha ...
130 Burkhardt home. They stayed in a social environment with codes and unwritten rules dif- ferent from what they were used to. ...
Kontors and Outposts 131 “Civilizing Process,”1 which shows that rather unplanned proceedings starting in the twelfth century le ...
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