Tag Archives: Hanseatic League

The Brotherhood of Blackheads: Commercial Facilitators, City Defenders, Social Organisers and Baltic Boys Club

We’re in Riga, it’s 2015, I’m roaming around Vecrīga (the “old town”), first-time visitor. In the main square (Ratslaukums 7, Centra rajons), I come across this unusual old Gothic-style building, rather grand with an unusual triangular-shaped double facade done in the Dutch Renaissance manner. This structure, which at first I took for a not-so orthodox church, goes by the strange and enigmatic name House of Blackheads. Blackheads? Sounds a bit dermatological, really quite comical, like “House of Blackadders”. Was it some kind of lavish upmarket amusement parlour, a games arcade perhaps?

image: loc.gov
The House of Blackheads, Riga (with the statue of St Roland in the foreground)

The answer is more mundane…part of the Riga tourist trail, the building these days doubles as a museum and events centre. The “Blackheads” in question were an association of young, unmarried foreigners, (mainly German-speaking) merchants and shipowners and the house was a venue where these well-to-do bachelor boys used to party – hard! The Brotherhood of Blackheads have a long history going back to the 1330s and was active in both Latvia and Estonia (in medieval times part of Greater Livonia). According to legend, the brotherhood’s genesis lies in a group of unmarried foreign merchants who participated in the defence of Reval (former name of Tallinn, capital of Estonia) during the Saint George’s Night Uprising (1343–1345)🄰 [A. Davey, ‘The Brotherhood of Blackheads’, Flickr; ‘The Brotherhood of Blackheads’, Wikipedia, http://en.m.wikipedia.org].

Blackheads of Tallinn

House of the Blackheads (Mustapeade maja) at Pikk tänav 26 in Tallinn’s Old Town. (source:Brunswyk /  GNU Free Documentation License)

Paramilitaries, commercial traders and event planners: From its establishment the Brotherhood in Tallinn was more than a guild hall…it performed a military duty as an urban militia defending Hanseatic towns🄱 from external threats. In Tallinn the Brotherhood provided the city with a cavalry detachment to patrol the city walls, supplying weapons for the city’s defence. In the 1560s and 70s the Brotherhood was actively engaged in the long Livonian War, including defending the city against the invading Russians (Davey). It also operated as a commercial association. Over time the social organisational role of the Blackheads—sponsoring social and cultural events such as parties and concerts, collecting fine art—took precedence over its traditional military one🄲 [‘The Brotherhood of Blackheads: A Unique Medieval Club’, Lorris Chevalier, Medievalists.net, www.medievalists.net].

Hanseatic League: member cities Lübeck and Hamburg forging an alliance (1497)

Membership of the Brotherhood was not confined to merchants and shipowners, it ranged across the strata of medieval society to include a mix of occupations – palace stewards, non-noble estate lords, servants, butlers, clerks, scribes, artisans and of course soldiers (Chevalier). Like an American fraternity lodge, the Brotherhood had its own rules and customs which members were required under oath to observe.

Melno galvu nams, Rīga (photo: freepik.com)

The Brothers in Exile: When the USSR annexed the Baltic States in 1940, many of the Blackheads members escaped Riga and Tallinn, moving to Germany where they reestablished the Brotherhood in Hamburg (later relocating to Bremen where it apparently still exists today). The Blackheads house in Tallinn has been more fortunate than its Riga counterpart, it survives and the building is now a branch of the Tallinn Philharmonic.

The Blackheads House visitors can view in the heart of Riga’s Old Town, despite appearances, is not old, it is an historically faithful reconstruction of the original building. The original six centuries-old house was destroyed and obliterated as a result of the actions of first Nazi Germany and then the Soviet Union. After Latvia gained its independence the historic house was rebuilt in the late 1990s and restored to its former glory by the Ridzinieks🄳.

Portal of the Blackheads House, Riga

Endnote: Why “Blackheads”?: The source of the organisation’s nomenclature is not known for sure but it is likely to have something to do with St Mauritius (aka St Maurice), a black Roman soldier–commander of Egyptian origins (d. AD 287). St Mauritius, a Christian martyr, is the Brotherhood’s patron saint. He is commemorated on the house’s facade – represented by iconography on the portal and the Brotherhood’s emblem is a black moor’s head. Why these white, affluent merchant boys chose the 3rd century African saint St Mauritius as their talisman remains a mystery.

St Mauritius (image: Medieval World 5)

🄰 an unsuccessful attempt by the Estonian indigenous population to rid themselves of their German and Danish rulers and landlords and their Christian religion

🄱 the Blackheads guilds in Riga and Tallinn were allied with the Hanseatic League (North Sea/Baltic Sea trade bloc), playing a key role in facilitating Baltic trade between the Hanseatic cities in the Middle Ages

🄲 other Estonian cities including Tartu and Pärnu had their own Blackheads branch

🄳 inscribed above the entrance portal (in Latvian and German) are the words, “Should I ever crumble to dust, rebuild my walls you must””

Finland’s Magnetic Island: Jussarö, A Danger to Shipping

Its been called a ghost town but the island’s massive concentration of iron ore under the sea⧆ exerts a powerful magnetic pull on passing ships and boats. The island of Jussarö is one of some 40,000 (and counting) islands off the coast that form Finland’s vast archipelago⌖.

(Image: julkaisut.metsa.fi)
(Source: Abandoned Spaces)

The “ghost town” tag comes from the closure of the island’s iron ore mining works in 1967☯ due to a decline in the world price for the mineral (‘Jussarö’, www.en.jussaro.net) …leaving the landscape scattered with the remnants of old industrial buildings abandoned to nature.

Hanneke Wrome (Image: alchetron.com)

Compass interference, a danger to shipping
The dense concentration of iron ore deposits within the island has been known to make the navigation equipment of passing vessels in the Gulf of Finland go haywire. The magnetic force emitted by the island tends to make ships malfunction and their compasses point in the wrong direction. Historically, a consequence of this has been a large incidence of marine accidents and shipwrecks in the vicinity. In 1468 the Hanseatic League cargo ship ‘Hanneke Wrome’ (or ‘Vrome’) was caught in a storm and wrecked near Jussarö island with the loss of over 200 lives and a vast quantity of expensive fabric, barrels of honey, gold coins and jewellery (‘Finland’s abandoned iron ore mine’, Abandoned Spaces, Bojan Ivanov, www.abandonedspaces.com). Perhaps the most famous shipwreck, known as “Jussarö I”, is a early 16th century ship belonging to the fleet of Swedish king, Gustav I Vasa (‘Jussarö Island’, www.visitraseborg.com). Given this hazard, Jussarö has been a haven for pilot stations and lighthouses (the island’s earliest pilot station dated from early 19th century).

Sundharu lighthouse

Raseborg’s teeth “ship trap”
Several smaller islands and islets south of Jussarö collectively known as Raseborgs gaddama (Raseborg”s Teeth”) are particularly prone to shipwrecks. This area is known to have caused disturbances in navigation as early as the 17th century. In 1751 Swedish naval cartographer “Jonas Hahn was able to explain the phenomenon by the high iron content in the underwater rock formation in the area”. The Sundharu lighthouse was stationed on one of the skerries here to try to counter the danger (‘Finnish cases: Four case study areas. Case 1 – Jussarö ship trap’, www submariner-net.eu).

When the mining activity ended, Jussarö was taken over by the Finnish Defence Forces and used for military training and urban war simulation. After the army left in 2005 the island came under the administration of Metsähallitus, a state-owned authority in charge of national parks, wildlife and forestry. The main activity today is tourism with day-trippers regularly commuting from the mainland.

Postscript: The island’s 13th century footnote in history
Jussarö first gets a mention in medieval Danish documents, appearing in King Valdemar II’s Survey (or “Court Rolls”), a document compared to William the Conqueror’s Doomsday Book record. The ‘Survey’ of Valdemar II of Denmark (reigned 1202–1241) was a land register of Danish settlements and their populations, c. 1231 (Nils Hybel, The Nature of Kingship c.800–c.1300: The Danish Incident , (2017)). Jussarö is included in the royal survey apparently because it was on the Danish route map (www.en.jussaro.net).

(Source: nationalparks.fi)

𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨𓆨
⧆ the largest deposits of iron ore in Finland
⌖ Jussarö itself lies within the Ekenäs Archipelago
☯ the second time iron ore mining operations had been abandoned on Jussarö, previous it was mined, sometimes using Russian prisoners, from the 1830s to 1861