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oapen-20.500.12657-577412022-08-03T03:09:36Z Die Regesten der Urkunden im Staatsarchiv der Freien und Hansestadt Hamburg Bd. II: 1400–1440 Sarnowsky, Juergen Kubon, Sebastian Hamburg Medieval age Official documents Threse History bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLC Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500::HBLC1 Medieval history As in all medieval cities, writing became increasingly important in Hamburg in the course of the later Middle Ages. In addition to the creation of various city books, there was a growing need to safely store the originals of important documents. These were collected in the so-called Threse, which soon formed a separate section of the emerging municipal archive. Although the holdings in the Hamburg State Archives are largely complete (with the exception of some losses due to the Second World War, among other things), the indexing by Johann Martin Lappenberg, which took place after the fire in Hamburg City Hall in 1842, still forms the basis for working with the material today. A comprehensive scholarly reappraisal remained a desideratum for a long time. 2022-08-02T12:43:11Z 2022-08-02T12:43:11Z 2021 book ONIX_20220802_9783943423884_26 9783943423884 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/57741 ger application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9783943423884.pdf https://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hupwp/cart/?add-to-cart=1615&quantity=1 Hamburg University Press 10.15460/HUP.214 As in all medieval cities, writing became increasingly important in Hamburg in the course of the later Middle Ages. In addition to the creation of various city books, there was a growing need to safely store the originals of important documents. These were collected in the so-called Threse, which soon formed a separate section of the emerging municipal archive. Although the holdings in the Hamburg State Archives are largely complete (with the exception of some losses due to the Second World War, among other things), the indexing by Johann Martin Lappenberg, which took place after the fire in Hamburg City Hall in 1842, still forms the basis for working with the material today. A comprehensive scholarly reappraisal remained a desideratum for a long time. 10.15460/HUP.214 35685259-3553-4bae-af55-685815864a93 3e331ab5-8e60-41cc-a8b9-dcea3f90dc55 9783943423884 596 Hamburg [...] open access
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As in all medieval cities, writing became increasingly important in Hamburg in the course of the later Middle Ages. In addition to the creation of various city books, there was a growing need to safely store the originals of important documents. These were collected in the so-called Threse, which soon formed a separate section of the emerging municipal archive. Although the holdings in the Hamburg State Archives are largely complete (with the exception of some losses due to the Second World War, among other things), the indexing by Johann Martin Lappenberg, which took place after the fire in Hamburg City Hall in 1842, still forms the basis for working with the material today. A comprehensive scholarly reappraisal remained a desideratum for a long time.
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