Hanse
Meaning
- (historical) A merchant guild, particularly the Fellowship of London Merchants (the "Old Hanse") given a monopoly on London's foreign trade by the Normans or its successor, the Company of Merchant Adventurers (the "New Hanse"), incorporated in 1497 and chartered under Henry VII and Elizabeth I.
- (historical) The rights and privileges of such guilds, particularly their trade monopolies.
- (historical) A commercial association of Scottish free burghs in the Middle Ages.
- (historical) The Hanseatic League: a commercial association of German towns in the Middle Ages.
- (alt-of, alternative, historical) Alternative form of hanse, the fees payable to a Hanse or its guildhall.
Pronounced as (IPA)
/hæns/
Etymology
In summary
From Middle English hanse, from Old French hanse (“guild; guild fee”), from Medieval Latin hansa, from Old High German hansa, from Proto-West Germanic *hansu, from Proto-Germanic *hansō (“gathering; coalition; gang of men”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱómsōd (“union; gathering”), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm (“beside, by, with, along”) + *sed- (“to sit”). In reference to the Hanseatic League, via German Hanse. Cognate with Old English hōs (“company, retinue, escorts”),
Notes
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