Results
Ergebnisse
Denmark
[Den]marcken; D(ennemarck); D]ennemarck; Dacia; Dacie; Dacorum; Danes; Daniae; Danico; Danie; Danisch; Danish; Daniæ; Danm(ar)kis; Danmarch; Danmarchs; Danmarck; Danmarckes; Danmarckis; Danmarcks; Danmark; Danmarkis; danmarks; Danmerckur; Dannemarck; Dannemargk; Dannemarken; Dannemarkes; Dannmarks; Danorum; Dansk; danska; Danske; danskra; Dantzka; Dantzke; Dantzker; Denemarcken; Denemarke; Denemarkede; Denemercken; Denen; Denische; Denischen; Denischenn; Denm(arck); Denmarck; Denmarcken; Denmarckenn; Denmargken; Denmargkes; Denmark; Denmarkhen; Dennemarcgen; Dennemarcgk; Dennemarche; Dennemarchen; Dennemarck; Dennemarck(en); Dennemarcke; Dennemarckem; Dennemarcken; Dennemarckenn; Dennemarckern; Dennemarckes; Dennemarckh; Dennemarckhen; Dennemarckische; Dennemarckischem; Dennemarckischen; Dennemarckischer; Dennemarckischs; Dennemarg; Dennemargh; Dennemargk; dennemargke; Dennemargken; Dennemargkenn; Dennemark; Dennemarkede; Dennemarken; Dennemarkisch; Dennemarkisch(es); Dennemarkische; Dennemarkischen; Dennemarkischenn; Dennemergke; Dennemergken; Dennemergkenn; Dennemerken; Dennemersche; Dennenmarcken; Dennermarcksche; Dennischen; Dennmarcken; Dennmarckenn; Densis; Denske; Scottish
Region/Country: Region/Land: Denmark, Denmark
The Kingdom of Denmark consists of the Jutland peninsula and the islands between the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. It was merged with Norway and Sweden in the Kalmar Union (1397-1523), and became the dominant power in Scandinavia in the late Middle Ages, controlling Norway, Skåne, the territories of Schleswig and Holstein (formally part of the Holy Roman Empire), Iceland, the Faroes and Shetland (the latter became Scottish in 1468).
Displaying records 41 tobis 50 ofvon 681 Einträgen gezeigt
Transcript available
[1532, after August 23]
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Henry VIII of England: reply to the complaint of English merchants from Lynn about Lutke Schmidt in Iceland, whom they have asked to send his version of the events, and hope that Germans and English can behave peacefully in Iceland.
Transcript available
1532, August 23
[Hamburg]
Lutke Schmidt to Hamburg: reply to the complaint of English merchants, in which he tells his version of the events in Iceland in 1532, when he arrived on March 30 with a ship in Botsand, and was visited by Thomas Hammon from Harwich, and the day after by Jon Willer from Lynn, who attacked him both.
Transcript available
1532, September 7
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Henry VIII of England: state that they have heard from the Hanseatic Kontor in London about the complaints of merchants from Lynn and Harwich about damage inflicted to them by Lutke Schmidt from Hamburg in Iceland, and state that the English merchants have caused the conflict themselves by their unruly behaviour. Moreover, Lutke Schmidt has declared to be prepared to let a law court decide upon this, which should happen at the court of the Danish king, since Iceland belongs to him.
Transcript available
1532,October 13
Gottorf
King Frederick I of Denmark to king Henry VIII of England: in response to English complaints about violence of Hamburg and Bremen merchants against them in Iceland, it is stated that the English behaved unlawfully against the local population, and therefore the Germans were only helping the governour to punish the English. Therefore, it is asked to excuse them and to refrain from measures against German merchants in England.
Transcript available
1532, October 21
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Henry VIII of England: in response to complaints of Nicolaus Gybson, whose ship was attacked by Hamburg and Bremen merchants in Iceland last summer, it is stated that the English misbehaved and that the German merchants were only helping the Danish governour to punish them.
1532, October 23
Hamburg
Hamburg to Bremen: as the attacks on English merchants in Iceland last summer were done on order of the Danish governour, the matter has been passed on to the Danish king, and they send Bartholomeus van der Linden, secretary of the London Kontor, with a copy of the letter to the English king.
1532, October 23
Hamburg
Hamburg to the Hanseatic Kontor in London: Hamburg and Bremen merchants have assisted the Danish governour in Iceland against English merchants last summer, and the Kontor's secretary Bartholomeus van der Linden will bring a copy of Hamburg's reply to the complaints of the English king. Also, the merchants who will sail to Iceland next year have been ordered to behave peacefully towards the English there.
1532, October 30
[Hamburg]
Tonnies Pingsten, Hinrick Martins and Lutke Schmidt to bailiff Dirick tho Bramstede in Iceland: repeated request for his support in the conflict with the English about the violence in Iceland.
Transcript available
1532, early November
Trondheim
[Archbishop Olaf of Trondheim] to King Frederick I of Denmark: list of points where Norwegian privileges are bypassed, mostly related to church goods and offices, as well as Iceland and the Faroes, which are in German hands, to the disadvantage of Norwegian merchants.
Transcript available
1532, November 6
Dirick tho Bramstede, governour of Iceland, testifies to the Bremen city council, that the Bremen skippers Baedtke Duerkoep and Herman Buerman, who were involved in the attacks on the English in Iceland, were helping the bailiff Dirick van Minden and not acting on their own initiative.
Displaying records 41 tobis 50 ofvon 681 Einträgen gezeigt
© DSM B.Holterman J.Nicholls (2018)