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Hamburg
Andres Hamburg; Ha[m]borger; Hamb(orgense); Hamb(orgensis); Hamb(urger); Hamb(urgische); Hamborch; Hamboreg; Hamborg; hamborgar; hamborgarmenn; Hamborge; Hamborgen; Hamborgenn; hamborgenses; hamborgensibus; Hamborger; Hamborgere; Hamborgeren; Hamborgerenn; Hamborgeris; Hamborgern; Hamborgernn; Hamborgers; Hamborgeske; Hamborgger; Hamborgh; Hamborgher; Hamborgi; hamborgiam; Hamborgisch; Hamborgische; Hamborgk; Hamborig; Hamboriger; Hamborough; Hambourg; Hambourgers; Hambourgois; Hambrough; Hambrugh; Hambrughe; Hamburch; Hamburck; Hamburg; Hamburgck; Hamburge; hamburgen(sis); hamburgensem; Hamburgenses; Hamburgensi; Hamburgensibus; Hamburgensis; Hamburgensium; Hamburger; Hamburgere; Hamburgeren; Hamburgerenn; Hamburgern; Hamburgerr; Hamburgers; Hamburgh; Hamburghensis; hamburgher; Hamburghers; Hamburghmenn; Hamburgi; Hamburgisch; Hamburgische; Hamburgischen; Hamburgj; Hamburgk; Hamburgkh; hamburgo; Hamburgsche; Hamburgum; Hammborg; Hammborgers; Hanborger; Handborg; Handborgar; handborgara; handborgarar; handborgarmenn; Homborch; Homborck; Homborger; Islandt; Jslandia; Jslandiam; Jslandie
Region/Country: Region/Land: Hamburg, Holy Roman Empire
Hamburg is a harbour town on the rivers Elbe and Alster in Northern Germany. It grew around an 8th-century fortification and became one of the most important trading places in the Hanseatic network - together with Lübeck - as a crucial turnover point on the east-west trade routes, connecting the Baltic and North Sea and the German hinterland via the Elbe river.
Displaying records 321 tobis 330 ofvon 632 Einträgen gezeigt
1570, October 15
Stettin
Joachim Hinck, dean of the Bremen cathedral chapter, to Danish councillor Peter Oxen: repeated request to help Bremen merchants in Stappe in Iceland against interference of Hamburg merchants, even though Oxen answered that the harbour had already been given to someone else.
Transcript available
1571, January 23
Bremen
Christoffer Bornhorst, Vasmer Bake, Johan Hudeman, Johan Lubbe and Christoffer Meier (merchants with Bodenstede in Iceland) to Bremen: complaint about interference of Hamburg merchant Hans Gronewoldt, who is licensed with the harbour Reff, in the harbour Stappe, which belongs to Bodenstede, for the last three years.
Transcript available
1571, January 25
Bremen
Bremen to king Frederick II of Denmark: complain about the use of the harbour Stappe in Iceland by a Hamburg merchant, who interferes with business of Bremen merchants in nearby Bodenstede, and asks the king to prevent this.
1571, March 24
Fredriksborg
King Frederick II of Denmark to governour Johan Bockholt in Iceland: states that Copenhagen burgomaster Marcus Hes, who let a ship sail to the harbour Botsand in Iceland, has complained about interference of Hamburg merchants there, and asks to not allow this anymore.
1573, April 19
Hamburg
Hamburg merchants with Iceland to Hamburg: although it has been forbidden for Hamburg merchants to use three harbours in the north of Iceland, which are used by Copenhagen burgomaster Marcus Hess, count Adolf of Schleswig-Holstein is now preparing a ship to sail there, under command of Hamburg skipper Herman von Horsten.
Transcript available
1573, April 20
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Frederick II of Denmark: complaint of the merchants with Iceland, that they have been forbidden to use three harbours in the North of Iceland, Oyefordt, Husewick and Schagefordt, which are now used by Copenhagen burgomaster Marcus Hess, and that now count Adolf of Schleswig-Holstein is preparing a ship to sail there, under command of Hamburg skipper Herman von Horsten.
1573, November 3
Koldinghus
King Frederick II of Denmark permits Jochim Thim from Hamburg to trade in the Faroes until further notice, under the condition that he imports commodities of good quality and uses the right weights and measures, but that the Faroese are free to trade with others as well.
Transcript available
1573, November 26
[Hamburg]
Eldermen of the confraternity of merchants with Iceland to Hamburg: complaint against Carsten Langwedel, who has not paid the rent of his house to the confraternity for two years, and has stolen goods from the property. Although Langwedel claims to own the house, this is not true, and it is demanded that he pays the money and returns the confiscated property.
Transcript available
1575, August 6
Skriðuklaustur
Eirikur Arnason states, that he has bought a barrel of iron (osemund) from Bernd Losekanne in Dupwage in Iceland, and left it there to collect it later, and that a piece of wadmal, which he left at the trading site, was not intended for Losekanne but for a Hamburg merchant named Matthias.
Transcript available
[1576, after February 13]
[Bremen]
Bernd Losekanne to [Bremen]: final plea against Christoffer Meyer, in which he explains that three of his trading partners mutinied against him in Iceland, and although he had the right as skipper to expel the mutineers from the company, they conspired against him, so that he was forced to leave the company and fit out a ship himself. That being the case, he has as much right as his former trading partners to use the harbour Ostforde, especially since the trade with Iceland has been freed from restrictions, but if they really insist on prohibiting him to use the Ostforde, they themselves are not welcome in Roderforde, the harbour he used last year.
Displaying records 321 tobis 330 ofvon 632 Einträgen gezeigt
© DSM B.Holterman J.Nicholls (2018)