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  1. www.hanse.org › en › the-medieval-hanseatic-leagueThe medieval Hanseatic League

    The beginning of the Hanseatic League cannot be traced to a specific year or place. Over the course of the centuries, one of the most powerful trade and city networks in medieval Europe developed from loose associations of long-distance traders into shipping communities, the so-called "hansa". Learn more.

  2. The Hanseatic League, in other words, was active in quality control. Highly prized cloth from Bruges or Leiden would be trademarked, even though there was no international law that prevented the ...

  3. Hanseatic League , or Hansa, (from German Hanse, “association”) Organization founded in the late medieval period by northern German towns and merchant communities to protect their trading interests. The league dominated commercial activity in northern Europe from the 13th to the 15th century.

  4. Northern Europe in 1400, showing the extent of the Hansa. The Hanseatic League (also known as the Hansa) was an alliance of trading guilds that established and maintained a trade monopoly along the coast of Northern Europe, from the Baltic to the North Sea, during the Late Middle Ages and Early modern period (circa thirteenth–seventeenth ...

  5. May 11, 2018 · Hanseatic League. The league was a trading alliance which, at its height, included 200 towns, of which the most important were Lübeck, Hamburg, Bremen, Cologne , and Danzig. Founded in the 13th cent., it survived until the 17th and exercised great naval and diplomatic, as well as economic, power.

  6. Hanseatic League - Medieval Trade, German Cities, Baltic Sea: During the 14th century the Hanseatic League was molded into its definitive form. That form was neither clear-cut nor rigid. The league was not a true political federation, and it was not a true corporation.

  7. The Hanseatic League was a 14th to 17th century confederation of merchant guilds and their market towns. Founded towards the end of the 12th century by a small group of German towns on the Baltic Sea, the league went on to include some two hundred towns and dominate maritime trade in northern Europe for around four hundred years.

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