General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 - By Robert Kerr














































































































 -  The establishment of the Hanseatic League, some of the
cities composing which lay in the Baltic, gradually made the Scandinavian - Page 656
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The Establishment Of The Hanseatic League, Some Of The Cities Composing Which Lay In The Baltic, Gradually Made The Scandinavian Nations Better Known, And By Creating A Demand For Their Produce, Stimulated Them To Industry And Commerce.

In a poor country, however, with a sterile soil and ungenial climate; where winter prevented intercourse by sea, for

Several months every year, capital must increase very slowly, and commerce, reciprocally the cause and effect of capital, equally slow. Besides the piratical habits of the early Scandinavians, were adverse to trade; and these habits shed their influence even after they were discontinued. But though the Scandinavian nations were long in entering into any commercial transactions of importance, yet they contributed indirectly to its advancement by the improvements they made in ship-building, as well as by the ample materials for this purpose which their country supplied. Their ships indeed were constructed for warfare, but improvements in this description of ships naturally, and almost unavoidably, led to improvements in vessels designed for trade. In 1449, a considerable commerce was carried on between Bristol, and Iceland, and Finmark, in vessels of 400, 500, and even 900 tons burden, all of which, there is reason to believe, were built in the Baltic; and, about six years afterwards, the king of Sweden was the owner of a ship of nearly 1000 tons burden, which he sent to England, with a request that she might be permitted to trade.

Gustavus I. who reigned about the beginning of the sixteenth century, seems to have been the first Swedish king who directed the attention and industry of his subjects to manufactures and commerce; but, in the early part of his reign, the inhabitants of Lubec had the monopoly of the foreign trade of Stockholm.

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