hanse

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See also: Hanse and Hanses

English

Etymology 1

See Hanse.

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

Noun

hanse (plural hanses)

  1. (historical) Alternative form of Hanse, a merchant guild or a former commercial league of German cities.
    • (Can we date this quote?), An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire, p. 252:
      The town does not seem to have had a hanse, nor have there been discovered any records showing the existence of medieval trade guilds; []
    • (Can we date this quote?), Institutions and European Trade, p. 95:
      In this, they resembled the alien merchant guilds and hanses of the medieval period.
    • 2002, P. Boissonnade, Life and Work in Medieval Europe, page 208:
      Gilds and hanses seized control of the export trade []
    • 2002, T. H. Lloyd, England and the German Hanse, 1157-1611: A Study of Their Trade, page 1:
      For the sake of convenience the title is generally shortened to Hanse, but the initial capital is retained, not least to prevent confusion with other hanses.
  2. (historical) The guildhall of a Hanse.
  3. (historical) A fee payable to the Hanse, particularly its entrance fee and the impost levied on non-members trading in its area.
Synonyms
Translations

References

  • Oxford English Dictionary, 1st ed. "Hanse, n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 1898.

Etymology 2

Compare French anse (handle), anse de panier (surbased arch, flat arch, vault), and English haunch (hip).

Noun

hanse (plural hanses)

  1. (architecture) That part of an elliptical or many-centred arch which has the shorter radius and immediately adjoins the impost.
    • 1736, Richard Neve, Neve's The city and country purchaser and builder's dictionary
      Now Workmen call each End of these Arches the Hanse, which Hanses are always the Arches of smaller Circles than the Scheme, which is the middle Part of these Arches, and consists of a Part of a larger Circle []
    • 1846, Cambridge Antiquarian Society, Quarto Publications, volume 1, page 60:
      The building, from the tenor of the whole description, was in the style of the Renaissance, and the pillars (spiral or wreathed) probably supported the hanses, or spring of the arch.

Anagrams