Finish Trade

Finish trade was organized in such a manner that it engaged many of the Finish peasants who played a very central role in building the economy of the coastland between Viipuri and the Gulf of Bothnia. Among the products which were traded between Finland and the Hanse included meat, butter, fish, livestock, domestic artifacts, cloth, firewood, and timber (Simms, & Clarke, 2015). Finland had several trade towns some of which were located in the coastlines. These towns served as main entry points for imported goods and exporters of Finnish products. The trade between the German merchants and the peasant traders in Finland was considered as a lively interaction that did not necessarily follow the official trade regulations in the Hanseatic League.
-Hamad
Sources: 
Simms, A. & Clarke, H. (2015). Lords and towns in medieval Europe: the European historic towns atlas project. London: Routledge.

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