Results
Ergebnisse
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 591 tobis 600 ofvon 632 Einträgen gezeigt
1603, April 29
Hamburg
Merchants who sail to Haneforde to Hamburg: request to leave the deposited freight money for a deposit, as long as the court has not reached a verdict about this matter.
Transcript available
1603, May 1
Bremen
Bremen to king Christian IV of Denmark: draft for an answer to the king's final prohibition of the Icelandic trade, in which the support of the governour and the islanders is asked in reclaiming their last outstanding debts. The letter was never sent.
Transcript available
1603, May 5
Hamburg
Merchants who trade with Haneforde to Hamburg: although the council has ordered them to deposit the 750 mark freight money which is claimed by the Kibbelwick merchants, they will not do so until the latter have shown their account books, and that the matter is too complex to be judged by jurists who know nothing about loading a ship, so former seafarers should be involved as well. Moreover, as they will sail out, it is asked to postpone the case until after their return.
1603, September 8
Hamburg
Berndt Salfeld to Hamburg: complains about how he went to the harbour Reff in Iceland to pick up a load of stockfish which was traded by his brother David, and which he couldn't take last year, but was accused by lawman Jon Jonsson that his license was expired, and his brother David had traded illegally in Reff, and his goods and booths were confiscated.
1603, September 13
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Christian IV of Denmark: request to return the goods that were confiscated from Bernd Salfeld in Iceland by the lawman when he tried to collect his outstanding debts.
1603, September 23
Hamburg
Bernd Salfeld to Hamburg: complains about how he went to the harbour Reff in Iceland to pick up a load of stockfish which was traded by his brother David with consent of lawman Jon Jonsson, and which he couldn't take last year, but was accused by governour Ewalt Kruse that his license was expired, and his brother David had traded illegally in Reff, and his goods and booths were confiscated.
1603, November 13
Hamburg
Hamburg to king Christian IV of Denmark: request to return the goods that were confiscated from Bernd Salfeld in Iceland by the governor and lawman when he tried to collect his outstanding debts.
1604, January 10
Hamburg
Bernd Salfeld to king Christian IV of Denmark: complains how his goods have been confiscated in Iceland by the governour by request of lawman Jon Jonsson, and was forced to pay 2000 daler because he tried to collect his outstanding debts, and asks to let Jonsson appear before court.
1604, January 11
Hamburg
Merchants who trade with Kibbelwick to Hamburg: write that the council has decided last year that the Haneforde merchants have to deposit 750 mark, which the Kibbelwick merchants claim they owe them for freight money, but that they refuse to do this and are continuously obstructing the judicial process, and ask the council not to tolerate this anymore.
1604, January 23
Hamburg
Merchants who trade with Kibbelwick to Hamburg: final statement in the case about the freight space shared with the Haneforde merchants, in which they state that they reserved a space of 50 lasts on their ship for the goods of the Haneforde merchants, who never used and did not need this space, and filled it with all kinds of useless stuff in Iceland, only to annoy them.
Displaying records 591 tobis 600 ofvon 632 Einträgen gezeigt
© DSM B.Holterman J.Nicholls (2018)