A map of the expanse of the Hanseatic League, mostly known as Hansa (copyright: W. Heinemann / Bibliographisches Institut Leipzig). The Hanseatic League was a large commercial and also politico-military confederation of merchant guilds and commercial towns in North and Central Europe.
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Expanse of the Hanseatic League
05/05/2020
Uncategorized Baltic Sea, Denmark, Germany, Hansa, Hanseatic League, Military, Military history, Military topics, naval history, Naval warfare, Navy, Netherlands, Poland, Scandinavia, Sweden Leave a comment
Ammunition, grenades and other weaponry of the two World Wars cause contamination in the North Sea and Baltic Sea
26/08/2019
Uncategorized Baltic Sea, Energy and environement, grenade, North Sea, weaponry, World War, World War I, World War II Leave a comment
Republication from balticsea-report.eu
Site of the North Sea coastline.
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Millions of tons of old ammunition and poison gas grenades lie at the bottom of the North and Baltic Seas – dangerous relics of the two world wars. After all, the old munitions rust and release their toxic ingredients. Removal is dangerous, complex and expensive. This is why Fraunhofer researchers are working with salvage companies to develop a robotic system that enables semi-automatic disposal.
Stanford researchers find clues to the Baltic Crusades in animal bones, horses and the extinct aurochs
06/05/2016
Uncategorized Baltic crusades, Baltic Sea, Crusaders, Crusades, Germans, Germany, Lithuania, Poland, Poles, Teutonic Order Leave a comment
The Teutonic Order’s Marienburg Castle, Monastic state of the Teutonic Knights, now Malbork, Poland
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By Melissa Pandika
Stanford researchers have discovered that pagan villages plundered by medieval knights during the little-known Baltic Crusades had some problems in common with the modern-day global village.
Among them: deforestation, asymmetric warfare and species extinction.
According to a research paper published in Science, a project investigating the Baltic Crusades’ profound environmental legacy could yield valuable insight into colonialism, cultural changes and ecological exploitation – relevant issues not only throughout history, but especially in today’s increasingly globalized society.
The researchers, including professors at Stanford and in Europe, are drawing from disciplines as disparate as history and chemistry to analyze their findings, which they’ve already begun synthesizing into a database of unprecedented depth and scope.
Their study spans the years from the 12th century to the 16th century, when the Teutonic Order, a Germanic brotherhood of Christian knights, waged war against the last indigenous pagan societies in Europe in a region that includes modern-day Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Belarus and parts of Sweden and Russia.