
Northern Europe in 1400, showing the
extent of the Hansa

Lübeck – The "Queen of the
Hanse"
The
Hanseatic League (also known as the
Hanse or Hansa) was an alliance of trading
cities and their guilds that established and
maintained a trade monopoly along the coast
of Northern Europe, from the
Baltic
to the
North
Sea
and inland, during the Late Middle Ages and early modern period (c.13th–17th centuries). The Hanseatic cities
had their own law system and furnished their own protection and
mutual aid.
History
Historians
generally trace the origins of the League to the rebuilding of the
North German town of Lübeck
in 1159 by Duke Henry the
Lion of Saxony, after Henry had
captured the area from Count Adolf
II of Holstein.
Exploratory trading adventures, raids and piracy had
happened earlier throughout the Baltic (see Vikings) — the sailors of
Gotland
sailed up rivers as far away as Novgorod
, for
example — but the scale of international trade economy in the Baltic area remained
insignificant before the growth of the Hanseatic
League.
German cities achieved domination of trade in the Baltic with
striking speed over the next (i.e.
13th) century, and Lübeck became a central
node in all the seaborne trade that linked the areas around the
North
Sea
and the Baltic Sea. The 15th century saw the
climax of Lübeck's
hegemony.
Foundation and formation

Hanseatic League's foundation in
Hamburg, Germany (circa 1241)
Lübeck became a base for
merchants from
Saxony and
Westphalia to spread east and
north. Well before the term
Hanse appeared in a document
(1267), merchants in a given city began to form
guilds or
Hansa with the intention of
trading with towns overseas, especially in the less-developed
eastern Baltic area, a source of
timber,
wax,
amber,
resins,
furs, even
rye and
wheat brought down on
barges from the
hinterland to port markets. The towns furnished
their own protection armies and each guild had to furnish a number
of members into service, when needed. The trade ships often had to
be used to carry soldiers and their arms. The Hanseatic cities came
to each other's aid.
Visby
functioned
as the leading centre in the Baltic before the Hansa.
For 100
years the Germans sailed under the Gotlandic flag to Novgorod
.
Sailing east, Visby merchants established a branch at Novgorod. To
begin with the Germans used the Gotlandic
Gutagard.
With the influx of too many merchants, the
Gotlanders arranged their own trading stations for the German
Peterhof
further up
from the river. Before the foundation of the Hanseatic
league in 1356 the word
Hanse did not occur in the Baltic.
The Gotlanders used the word
varjag.
Hansa societies worked to remove restrictions to trade for their
members.
For example, the merchants of the Cologne Hansa convinced Henry II of England to free them (1157)
from all tolls in London
and allow
them to trade at fairs throughout England
. The
"Queen of the Hansa", Lübeck, where traders trans-shipped goods
between the North Sea and the Baltic, gained the Imperial privilege
of becoming an
Free imperial city
in 1227, the only such city east of the River
Elbe.
In 1241,
Lübeck, which had access to the Baltic and North Sea fishing
grounds, formed an alliance — a foundation of the
League — with Hamburg
, another
trading city, which controlled access to salt-trade routes from
Lüneburg
. The allied cities gained control over most
of the
salt-fish trade,
especially the
Scania Market; and
Cologne joined them in the
Diet of 1260. In 1266,
Henry III of England granted the Lübeck
and Hamburg Hansa a charter for operations in England, and the
Cologne Hansa joined them in 1282 to form the most powerful
Hanseatic colony in London. Much of the drive for this co-operation
came from the fragmented nature of existing territorial government,
which failed to provide security for trade. Over the next 50 years
the Hansa itself emerged with formal agreements for confederation
and co-operation covering the west and east
trade routes. The chief city and linchpin
remained Lübeck; with the first general Diet of the Hansa held
there in 1356 – this is the date of its official formation —
the Hanseatic League acquired an official structure.
Expansion

Main trading routes of the Hanseatic
League
Lübeck's location on the Baltic provided access for trade with
Scandinavia and
Kiev
Rus, putting it in direct competition with the Scandinavians
who had previously controlled most of the Baltic trade routes. A
treaty with the Visby Hansa put an end to competition: through this
treaty the Lübeck merchants also gained access to the inland
Russian port of
Novgorod, where
they built a trading post or
Kontor.
Other such alliances formed throughout the
Holy Roman Empire. Yet the League never
became a closely-managed formal organisation. Assemblies of the
Hanseatic towns met irregularly in Lübeck for a
Hansetag
(‘Hanseatic Day’), from 1356 onwards, but many towns chose not to
send representatives and decisions were not binding on individual
cities. Over time, the network of alliances grew to include a
flexible roster of 70 to 170 cities.
The
league succeeded in establishing additional Kontors in
Bruges
(Flanders), Bergen
(Norway),
and London
(Kingdom of
England). These
trading posts
became significant
enclaves.
The London
Kontor, established in 1320, stood west of London Bridge
near Upper Thames Street. (Cannon
Street station
occupies the site .) It grew significantly over
time into a walled community with its own warehouses, weighhouse,
church, offices and houses, reflecting the importance and scale of
the activity carried on. The first reference to it as the Steelyard
(der Stahlhof) occurs in
1422.
In addition to the major Kontors, individual Hanseatic ports had a
representative merchant and warehouse.
In England this
happened in Boston
, Bristol
, Bishop's Lynn (now King's Lynn
), which features the sole remaining Hanseatic
warehouse in England, Hull
, Ipswich
, Norwich
, Yarmouth (now Great Yarmouth
), and York
.
The League primarily traded timber, furs, resin (or tar), flax,
honey, wheat, and rye from the east to Flanders and England with
cloth (and, increasingly,
manufactured
goods) going in the other direction. Metal ore (principally
copper and iron) and herring came southwards from Sweden.
German
colonists under strict Hansa supervision built numerous Hansa
cities on and near the east Baltic coast, such as Danzig
, Elbing
, Thorn
, Reval
, Riga
, and
Dorpat
, some of which still retain many Hansa buildings
and bear the style of their Hanseatic days. Most were
founded under
Lübeck law
(
Lübisches Recht), which provided that they had to appeal
in all legal matters to Lübeck's city council.
The Livonian Confederation incorporated
parts of modern-day Estonia
and Latvia
and had its
own Hanseatic parliament (diet); all of its major towns became
members of the Hanseatic League. The dominant language of
trade was
Middle Low German, a
dialect with significant impact for countries involved in the
trade, particularly the larger
Scandinavian languages.
Zenith
The League had a fluid structure, but its members shared some
characteristics. First, most of the Hansa cities either started as
independent cities or gained
independence through the collective bargaining power of the League,
though such independence remained limited. The Hanseatic
free imperial cities owed allegiance
directly to the
Holy Roman
Emperor, without any intermediate tie to the local nobility.
Another similarity involved the cities' strategic locations along
trade routes. In fact, at the height of its power in the late
1300s, the merchants of the Hanseatic League succeeded in using
their economic clout and sometimes their military might —
trade routes needed protecting and the League's ships sailed
well-armed — to influence imperial policy.
The League also wielded power abroad.
Between 1361 and
1370, the League waged war against Denmark
. Initially unsuccessful, Hanseatic towns in
1368 allied in the Confederation of Cologne, sacked
Copenhagen
and Helsingborg
, and forced King Valdemar IV of Denmark and his
son-in-law Hakon VI of Norway to
grant the League 15% of the profits from Danish trade in the
subsequent peace-treaty of
Stralsund in 1370, thus gaining an effective trade and
political monopoly in Scandinavia. This favourable treaty
was the high-water mark of Hanseatic power. The commercial
privileges were renewed in the
Treaty of Vordingborg, 1435.
The Hansa also waged a vigorous campaign against pirates. Between
1392 and 1440, maritime trade of the League faced danger from raids
of the
Victual Brothers and their
descendants,
privateers hired in 1392 by
Albert of Mecklenburg against the
Queen
Margaret I of Denmark.
In the
Dutch-Hanseatic War (1438—41),
the merchants of Amsterdam
sought and eventually won free access to the Baltic
and broke the Hansa monopoly. As an essential part of
protecting their investment in trade and ships, the League trained
pilots and erected
lighthouses.
Exclusive trade routes often came at a high price. Most foreign
cities confined the Hansa traders to certain trading areas and to
their own trading posts. They could seldom, if ever, interact with
the local inhabitants, except in the matter of actual negotiation.
Moreover, many people, merchant and noble alike, envied the power
of the League. For example, in London the local merchants exerted
continuing pressure for the revocation of the privileges of the
League. The refusal of the Hansa to offer reciprocal arrangements
to their English counterparts exacerbated the tension. King
Edward IV of England
reconfirmed the league's privileges in the
Treaty of Utrecht despite this
hostility, in part thanks to the significant financial contribution
the League made to the Yorkist side during
The Wars of the Roses.
A century later, in
1597, Queen Elizabeth I of
England expelled the League from London and the Steelyard
closed the following year. The very
existence of the League and its privileges and monopolies created
economic and social tensions that often crept over into rivalry
between League members.
Rise of rival powers
The economic crises of the late 14th century did not spare the
Hansa. Nevertheless, its eventual rivals emerged in the form of the
territorial states, whether new or
revived, and not just in the west: Poland triumphed over the
Teutonic Knights in 1466;
Ivan III of Russia ended the
entrepreneurial independence of Novgorod in 1478.
New vehicles of credit imported from Italy
outpaced
the Hansa economy, in which silver coin
changed hands rather than bills of
exchange.
In the 14th century, tensions between
Prussian region and the "Wendish" cities
(Lübeck and eastern neighbours) rose. Lübeck was dependent on its
role as centre of the Hansa, being on the shore of the sea without
a major river. Lübeck was on the entrance of the land route to
Hamburg, but this land route could be circumvented by the sea
travel around Denmark and through the Sound. Prussia's main
interest, on the other hand, was primarily the export of bulk
products like grain and timber, which were very important for
England, the
Low Countries, and later
on also for Spain and Italy.
In 1454, year of
Elisabeth
Habsburg's marriage to the Jagiellonian king the towns of the
Prussian Confederation rose
against the dominance of the Teutonic Order and asked for help from
King
Casimir IV of Poland.
Danzig, Thorn, and Elbing came under the protection of the
Kingdom of Poland,
(1466–1569 referred to as
Royal
Prussia) by the
Second
Peace of Thorn . Polish-Lithuania in turn was heavily supported
by the
Holy Roman Empire through
family connections and by military assistance under the
Habsburgs.
Kraków
, then the
capital of Poland, was also a Hansa city with German burghers
around 1500. The lack of customs borders on the River
Vistula after 1466 helped to gradually
increase Polish grain export, transported to the sea down the
Vistula, from 10,000
tonnes per year in the
late 15th century to over 200,000 tonnes in the 17th century. The
Hansa-dominated maritime
grain trade
made Poland one of the main areas of its activity, helping Danzig
to become the Hansa's largest city due to its control of Polish
grain exports.
The member cities took responsibility for their own protection.
Polish attempts at subjugating Danzig had to be fought off
repeatedly. In 1567 a Hanseatic League Agreement reconfirmed
previous obligations and rights of League members, such as common
protection and defense against enemies. The Prussian Quartier
cities of Thorn, Elbing, Koenigsberg and Riga and Dorpat also
signed. When pressed by the king of Poland-Lithuania, Danzig
remained neutral and would not allow ships running for Poland into
its territory.
They had to anchor somewhere else, such as
at Puck
(or
Pautzke as it was named then).
A major benefit for the Hansa was its domination of the
shipbuilding market, mainly in Lübeck and in Danzig. The Hansa sold
ships everywhere in Europe, including Italy.
The Hansa had
excluded the Hollanders
, because it wanted to favour Bruges as a huge
staple market at the end of a trade route. When the
Hollanders started to become competitors of the Hansa in
shipbuilding, the Hansa tried to stop the flow of shipbuilding
technology from Hansa towns to Holland. Danzig, a trading partner
of Amsterdam, tried to stall the decision. Dutch ships sailed to
Danzig to take grain from the Prussians directly, to the dismay of
Lübeck. Hollanders also circumvented the Hansa towns by trading
directly with North German princes in non-Hansa towns. Dutch
freight costs were much lower than those of the Hansa, and the
Hansa were excluded as middlemen.
When Bruges, Antwerp and Holland all became part of the same
country, the
Duchy of Burgundy, it
actively tried to take over the monopoly of trade from the Hansa,
and the staple market from Bruges was moved to Amsterdam. The Dutch
merchants aggressively challenged the Hansa and met with much
success. Hanseatic cities in Prussia, Livonia supported the Dutch
against the core cities of the Hansa in northern Germany. After
several naval wars between Burgundy and the Hanseatic fleets,
Amsterdam gained the position of leading port for Polish and Baltic
grain from the late 15th century onwards. The Dutch regarded
Amsterdam's grain trade as the mother of all trades
(
Moedernegotie). Denmark and England tried to destroy the
Netherlands in the early 16th
century, but failed.
Nuremberg
in Franconia developed an
overland route to sell formerly Hansa monopolized products from
Frankfurt
via Nuremberg and Leipzig
to Poland and Russia, trading Flemish cloth and
French wine in exchange for grain and
furs from the east. The Hansa profited from the Nuremberg
trade by allowing Nurembergers to settle in Hansa towns, which the
Franconians exploited by taking over trade with Sweden as well. The
Nuremberger merchant Albrecht Moldenhauer was influential in
developing the trade with Sweden and Norway, and his sons Wolf and
Burghard established themselves in Bergen and Stockholm, becoming
leaders of the Hanseatic activities locally.
End of the Hansa
At the start of the 16th century the League found itself in a
weaker position than it had known for many years. The rising
Swedish Empire had taken control of
much of the Baltic.
Denmark had regained control over its own
trade, the Kontor in Novgorod had closed, and the Kontor in
Bruges
had become
effectively defunct. The individual cities which made up the
League had also started to put self-interest before their common
Hansa interests. Finally the political authority of the German
princes had started to grow — and so constrain the
independence of action which the merchants and Hanseatic towns had
enjoyed.

Heinrich Sudermann
The League attempted to deal with some of these issues. It created
the post of
Syndic in 1556 and elected
Heinrich Sudermann as a permanent
official with legal training, who worked to protect and extend the
diplomatic agreements of the member towns. In 1557 and 1579 revised
agreements spelled out the duties of towns and some progress was
made. The Bruges Kontor moved to Antwerp and the Hansa attempted to
pioneer new routes. However, the League proved unable to halt the
progress around it and so a long decline commenced. The Antwerp
Kontor closed in 1593, followed by the London Kontor in 1598.
The
Bergen Kontor continued until 1754; its buildings alone of all the
Kontoren survive (see Bryggen
).
The gigantic
Adler von
Lübeck, which was constructed for military use against
Sweden during the
Northern
Seven Years' War (1563-70), but never put to military use,
epitomized the vain attempts of Lübeck to uphold its long
privileged commercial position in a changed economic and political
climate.
By the late 16th century, the League had imploded and could no
longer deal with its own internal struggles, the social and
political changes that accompanied the
Protestant Reformation, the rise of
Dutch and English merchants, and the incursion of the
Ottoman Empire upon its trade routes and upon
the Holy Roman Empire itself. Only nine members attended the last
formal meeting in 1669 and only three (Lübeck, Hamburg and Bremen)
remained as members until its final demise in 1862.
Despite its collapse, several cities still maintain the link to the
Hanseatic League .
The Dutch cities of Deventer
, Kampen
, Zutphen
, and the nine German cities Bremen
, Demmin
, Greifswald
, Hamburg
, Lübeck
, Lüneburg
, Rostock
, Stralsund
and Wismar
still call
themselves Hanse cities. Lübeck, Hamburg, and
Bremen continue to style themselves officially as "Free and
Hanseatic Cities." (Rostock's football team is named
F.C. Hansa
Rostock in memory of the city's trading past.) For Lübeck in
particular, this anachronistic tie to a glorious past remained
especially important in the 20th century. In 1937 the
Nazi Party removed this privilege through the
Greater Hamburg Act after the
Senat of Lübeck did not permit
Adolf Hitler to speak in Lübeck during his
election campaign.
He held the speech in Bad Schwartau
, a small village on the outskirts of Lübeck.
Subsequently, he referred to Lübeck as "the small city close to Bad
Schwartau."
Historical maps
File:First.Crusade.Map.jpg|Europe in
1097File:Scandinavia1219.png|The
Baltic
region in 1219 (German coast occupied by Denmark, before the
Battle of Bornhöved
File:Europein1328.png|Europe in 1328File:Europe in 1430.PNG|Europe
in 1430File:Europe in 1470.png|Europe in 1470
File:Carta
Marina.jpeg|Carta marina of
the Baltic
Sea
region (1539)File:Danmark-Norway in 1646,
Treaty of Brömsebro.gif|The Baltic region in 1646 (
Treaty of
Brömsebro)File:Denmark-Norway in 1658, Treaty of
Roskilde.GIF|The Baltic region in 1658 (
Treaty of Roskilde)File:Danmark-Norge i
1814, Wienerkongressen..GIF|The Baltic region in 1814 (
Congress of Vienna)
Lists of former Hansa cities
Members of the Hanseatic League

Cities of the Wendish and Pommeranian
Circle
Wendish Circle
Saxony, Thuringia, Brandenburg Circle
|
|
Prussia, Livonia, Sweden Circle
Rhine, Westphalia, the Netherlands Circle
Counting houses
Principal Kontore
Subsidiary Kontore
 Kontor in Antwerp
Other cities with a Hansa community
Hanseatic League of New Time (New Hansa)
In 1980, it was decided to re-establish the
Hanseatic League as the Hanseatic League of New
Time (also known as the New Hansa). It
hopes to foster and develop business links and tourism within towns
and cities as well as promote cultural exchange. Apart from old
Hanseatic cities, the New Hansa granted membership to some cities
which had not been members of the medieval Hansa but had had wide
trade connections with the Hansa in the Middle Ages. The latter include
twelve Russian cities, most notably Novgorod , which was a major Russian trade partner of the
Hansa in the Middle Ages, even though Russian cities had never been
official members of the Hanseatic League.
The
headquarters of the New Hansa is in Lübeck , Germany . The current President of the Hanseatic
League of New Time is Bernd Saxe, Mayor of Lübeck.
Each year one of the member cities of the New Hansa hosts the
Hanseatic Days of New
Time international festival.
Three years ago King's Lynn became the only English member of the
newly formed modern Hanseatic League.
Fictional references
- A Terran
Hanseatic League exists in Kevin
J. Anderson's science fiction
series, Saga of Seven
Suns. The political structure of this fictional
interstellar version closely resembles that of the historical
Hanseatic League.
- In the computer game series Patrician players begin as a
trader and work their way to the head of the Hanseatic League.
- In the computer game Darklands players can accept smaller missions
from Hanseatic traders.
- In the Perry Rhodan SF series, the
trade organisation the Cosmic Hansa (Kosmische
Hanse) covers the Galaxy. The English translation for this
organisation is Cosmic House (see American issues 1800-1803) as it
was felt that no one would understand the Hanseatic League
reference.
- Midgard open source content
management system has often been referred to as the Hanseatic
League of Open Source.
- In the Battletech tabletop
and roleplaying universe, there is a state in the Deep Periphery
(towards the center of the Galaxy, measured from Earth) called the
Hanseatic League, which is structured as a plutocratic trade
empire, but which has considerably more primitive social and
technological structures when compared to human societies closer to
Earth.
- Hanseatic League merchant caravans are used as the backdrop for
"living history" groups in Florida and North Carolina. Hanseatic League
Historical Re-enactors has two chapters, Bergens
Kontor in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and Voss Kontor
in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Both groups portray merchants from
a Hanseatic League merchant caravan originating from
kontors and towns in Norway. They offer "in
character" lectures, skits and "theatre in the round", based
on the history of the Hanseatic League, for the education and
entertainment of Renaissance Festival patrons and local
schools.
- Robert A. Heinlein's novel, Citizen of the Galaxy, revolves
around a loose league of trading spaceships of varying old Earth
nationalities like the Finns aboard the "Sisu." Another ship is
called "Hansea."
- Arthur Rimbaud mentions the Hansa
merchant ships in his poem, Le Bateau
ivre:
- :...moi, bateau perdu sous les cheveux des anses,
- :Jeté par l'ouragan dans l'éther sans oiseau,
- :Moi dont les Monitors et les voiliers des Hanses
- :N'auraient pas repêché la carcasse ivre d'eau ;
See also
References
Notes
- Translation of the grant of privileges to merchants in
1229:
- Fernand
Braudel: The Perspective of the World. Vol III of
Civilisation and Capitalism 1984
- Phillip Pulsiano, Kirsten Wolf, Medieval Scandinavia: An
Encyclopedia, Taylor & Francis, 1993, p.265, ISBN
0824047877
- Peter N. Stearns, William Leonard Langer, The Encyclopedia
of World History: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern, Chronologically
Arranged, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2001, p.265, ISBN
0395652375
- Angus MacKay, David Ditchburn, Atlas of Medieval
Europe, Routledge, 1997, p.171, ISBN 0415019230
- Norman Davies God's playground. A history of Poland,
Columbia University Press, 1982
Bibliography
- Dollinger, P. The German Hansa (1970; repr.1999).
- Nash, E. Gee. The Hansa. 1929 (Reprint. 1995 Edition,
Barnes and Noble)
External links
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