Hanse - traducción al ruso
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Hanse - traducción al ruso

1200S–1669 TRADE CONFEDERATION IN NORTHERN EUROPE
Hanseatic league; Hanse; Hanse towns; Hansa League; Hansestadt; Hansestad; Hanse city; Hanse town; List of ships of the Hanseatic League; Hanseatic cities; Hanseatic states; Hanseatic Diet; Hansetag; Hanse-Towns; Hanseatic city; Hanseatic town; The Hanseatic League; Teutonic Hanse; Hanse Towns; Hansa Towns; The Hansa; Hanseatic period; Lists of former Hansa cities; Hanseatic Cities; Members of the Hanseatic League; Draft:Second Danish-Hanseatic War; Second Danish-Hanseatic War; League of Convoys; Hanseatic
  • Modern, faithful painting of the ''[[Adler von Lübeck]]'' – the world's largest ship in its time
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  • UNESCO World Heritage Site]].
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  • Brama Żuraw w Gdańsku}} in the port city of [[Gdańsk]] (Danzig), today in Poland
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  • Hans Holbein]]
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  • Hanseatic Warehouse]] in [[King's Lynn]] is the only surviving League building in England
  • Hanseatic museum in [[Bergen]], Norway
  • The [[Oostershuis]], a [[kontor]] in Antwerp
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  • Main trading routes of the Hanseatic League
  • [[Heinrich Sudermann]]
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  • Map of the Hanseatic League, showing principal Hanseatic cities
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  • Hanseatic Seal of Elbing (now [[Elbląg]])
  • Hanseatic Seal of [[Stralsund]]
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  • Foundation of the alliance between [[Lübeck]] and [[Hamburg]] in the part about ship law (''Van schiprechte'') in the Hamburg city right from 1497.
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  • [[Stargard Mill Gate]], [[Pomerania]], today in Poland
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  • Town Hall of Reval]] (now [[Tallinn]], Estonia)
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Hanse         

[hæns]

существительное

история

Ганза

Ганзейский союз

Hanseatic         

[hænsi'ætik]

прилагательное

история

ганзейский

the Hanseatic league         
Ганзейский союз

Definición

Hanse
·noun An association; a league or confederacy.
II. Hanse ·noun That part of an elliptical or many-centered arch which has the shorter radius and immediately adjoins the impost.

Wikipedia

Hanseatic League

The Hanseatic League was a medieval commercial and defensive confederation of merchant guilds and market towns in Central and Northern Europe. Growing from a few North German towns in the late 12th century, the League between the 13th and 15th centuries ultimately encompassed nearly 200 settlements, across seven modern-day countries ranging from Estonia in the north and east to the Netherlands in the west and Kraków, Poland, in the south.

The League originated from various loose associations of German traders and towns formed to advance mutual commercial interests, such as protection against robbers. These arrangements gradually coalesced into the Hanseatic League, whose traders enjoyed toll privileges and protection in affiliated communities and their trade routes. Economic interdependence and kinship ties between merchant families, who held important positions in towns, led to deeper political integration and removing obstacles to trade. Hanseatic Cities gradually developed common trade regulations.

During its heydays, the Hanseatic League dominated maritime trade in the North and Baltic seas. It established trading posts in numerous towns and cities across Europe; some of these, like the Kontors in London, Bruges, Bergen and Novgorod, became extraterritorial entities that enjoyed considerable legal autonomy. Hanseatic merchants, or Hansards, operated in basic private companies and were widely renowned for their access to a variety of commodities, subsequently gaining privileges and protections abroad. The collective economic power made the League capable of imposing blockades and even waging war against kingdoms and principalities.

Even at its zenith, the Hanseatic League was never more than a loosely aligned confederation of city-states. It lacked a permanent administrative body, treasury, and standing military force. By the mid-16th century, these weak connections left the Hanseatic League vulnerable and it gradually unraveled as members became consolidated into other realms or departed, ultimately disintegrating in 1669. In the 14th century the Hanseatic League instated an irregular quasi-legislative diet (Middle Low German: dachvart or dach, German: Tagfahrt or Hansetag) that operated on deliberation and consensus.

The Hanseatic League used several types of ships that sailed over seas and on rivers. The most emblematic type was the cog. Knowing great diversity in construction, it was depicted on Hanseatic seals and coats of arms. By the end of the Middle Ages, the cog was replaced by other types like the hulk that later gave way to larger carvel types.

¿Cómo se dice Hanse en Ruso? Traducción de &#39Hanse&#39 al Ruso