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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hanseatic_league_6.jpg]]
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3Nothing to do with sports, the Hanseatic League was an economic alliance of cities centred around the Baltic and North Sea coasts of Europe from the 13th century to the 17th century, specifically Northern Germany, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania's modern borders. It began with an alliance between the Germanic cities of {{UsefulNotes/Hamburg}} and Lübeck; other key locations included Lüneburg,
4Bremen, Rostock, Danzig ([[PleaseSelectNewCityName now]] Gdańsk) and Riga, but also cities as far inland as Cologne, Berlin, Magdeburg and Krakow.
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6Designed to provide protection for mutual economic interests, they established trading posts as far apart as London and Novgorod (not to be confused with Nizhny Novgorod). They provided protection against pirates, trained harbour pilots and had periodic diets (that's assemblies). They were pretty protectionist and liked to get monopolies (a common medieval practice), and sometimes engaged in military warfare. In their heyday in the 14th to 15th century, they for instance took Copenhagen several times and won a say in who sat on the Danish and Swedish thrones. When they declined, Danish king Frederik II had them kicked out of Bergen in Norway to get a hold of power there.
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8Topping out about at 100 cities in the 14th century, the League gradually declined as its lack of central government (partly to avoid legal problems against a single entity) caused a problem against competition from Scandinavian merchants and the Dutch. This only got worse when the Reformation broke out and shattered the tenuous unity amongst the members. Once America was opened up and thus trade across the Atlantic grew more important than trade across the Baltic the league became an anachronism, and the death knell was sounded with the outbreak of the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar if not UsefulNotes/TheEightyYearsWar. For decades all of Northern Germany became the rope of a brutal tug of tug of war, and the Hanse members were no different. Caught between the Hanse's traditional Dutch, Scandinavian, and British trade rivals on one side and a Habsburg Empire trying to subjugate all the German states on the other, the rich but protectionist, divided, and weak Hansa became TheChewToy of countless armies and mercenaries while its' members split to one side or the other.
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10The league outlasted the war and managed to limp on for a few more years, but the last diet was held in 1669 and barely anybody showed up for the funeral. In 1862 somebody in what was then the budding UsefulNotes/ImperialGermany noticed the casket hadn't been buried and formally dissolved the dead league.
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12Its legacy lives on in a number of Dutch and German cities calling themselves "Hanseatic" (including the [[UsefulNotes/TheSixteenLandsOfDeutschland German states]] of Bremen and UsefulNotes/{{Hamburg}}, which have the official title of "Free Hanseatic City" and "Free and Hanseatic City" respectively). Many of those in present-day Germany have an extra H in their license plate codes (HB - ''Hansestadt Bremen'', HH - ''Hansestadt Hamburg'', HRO - ''Hansestadt Rostock'' and so on.) There is also the New Hanse, a voluntary association of cities that began in 1980. Membership in the New Hanse is open not only to former members of the old Hanse but also to former "kontore" (major trading partners) of the Hanse, with Novgorod being the largest of the kontore to join.
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14So what was all the trade that got those cities (or rather their upper classes) so rich? Gold? Jewels? Sometimes, yes. But mostly it was [[BoringButPractical Fish, Salt]], [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs Salted Fish]], pelts from the Slavic fringes of Europe and other relatively "common" goods which the Hanse made affordable to wide swaths of society.
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16!!In fiction
17* In the video game ''VideoGame/{{Patrician}}'', you are a trader trying to get to the head of the League.
18* The book ''Literature/{{Metro 2033}}'' features the Commonwealth of the Stations of the Ring Line who are called the Hansa/ the Hanse by everybody else due to their hypercapitalistic and decentralized nature.
19* An organisation of the same name appears in ''Literature/PerryRhodan'', although it's called "Cosmic House" in English translation. It is literally the Hanseatic League InSpace.
20* The League, under the name "The Hansa", is a playable country in the ''VideoGame/EuropaUniversalis'' games from one of III's expansions onward.
21* The League is also playable in sister game ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings 2'' (with the ''The Republic'' DLC. The Hansa was a league of merchant ''republics'', after all).
22* The large trade group in ''Literature/TheSagaOfSevenSuns'' styles itself the Terran Intergalactic Hansa.
23* Predictably, is mentioned in ''Literature/SixteenThirtyTwo'', though as the League is fading by then and the USE becomes the major military and economic power, it doesn't play much of a role.
24* The ''Brave New World'' expansion to the fifth iteration of VideoGame/{{Civilization}} added the Hanse as a unique building for the German civilization, replacing the normal bank building and granting bonus production to trade routes between the city and city-states.
25** The next iteration, for the same civilization, also provides the Hansa as a unique building, replacing the Industrial Zone district and grants bonus production for every adjacent Commercial Hub and resource.
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27!!In real life
28* The German airline Lufthansa (literally: Hansa [[SettingUpdate of the Air]]) tries to invoke the heritage of the Hanseatic League.
29* There's an AmusementPark near Sierksdorf north of Lübeck named Hansa-Park (originally Hansaland). Over the last years, it added more and more UsefulNotes/HanseaticLeague-themed attractions.
30* Rostock has the annual sailing event Hanse-Sail.
31* The Freie und Hansestadt (Free and Hanseatic City; official title) UsefulNotes/{{Hamburg}} loves to use "Hanse" in many contexts such as the shopping mall "Hanseviertel" or the boat exhibition "hanseboot" and also the car registration "HH" ("''Hansestadt Hamburg'' - "H" is Hannover.)
32** Similarly, the Freie Hansestadt Bremen has the car registration "HB" and the Hansestadt Lübeck (which was a free city until it was absorbed into Schleswig-Holstein in 1937[[note]]as this act happened during the Nazi era and Lübeck wasn't exactly asked its opinion, they tried to get it reversed in the 1950s but the constitutional court said no[[/note]]) "HL". After Reunification, four East German cities followed suit - Greifswald (HGW), Rostock (HRO), Stralsund (HST) and Wismar (HWI).
33* A number of German cities have neighborhoods called the ''Hansaviertel''. The best known is one in Berlin, which consists of high-rise apartment buildings designed by internationally known architects and built in 1955-1960 as a showcase for post-war architecture.
34* Rostock's main football team is called FC Hansa Rostock. Curiously, it is actually the most successful among the football teams from East Germany after Reunification, on which it spent a decade playing at the Bundesliga.
35* The most well-known German brand of adhesive bandage is called ''Hansaplast''.
36* As Germans love museums, there is at least one museum dedicated to Hanse history in the major member cities. The "European Hanse Museum" is in Lübeck

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