-
Raffelstetten customs regulations (Latin:
Inquisitio de
theloneis Raffelstettensis, literally: "Inquiry of the
Raffelstetten Tolls") is a rare example...
- muni****lity in the
district Linz-Land in the
Austrian state of
Upper Austria.
Raffelstetten Customs Regulations "Dauersiedlungsraum der
Gemeinden Politischen Bezirke...
- Franconia. They
appointed Louis's nephew,
Conrad as a duke. In 903 the
Raffelstetten customs regulations were
promulgated under Louis' reign, the
first customs...
-
issued a
customs code
concerning the
trade along the
Danube river at
Raffelstetten. He
survived the
disastrous Battle of Pressburg,
whereafter most of...
- Emilia-Romagna (Northeast Italy). King
Louis IV ("the Child")
promulgates the
Raffelstetten customs regulations, a
legal do****ent for a toll-bridge on the Danube...
-
Emperor by the pope Pope
Benedict IV. 903
Louis the
Child issued the
Raffelstetten customs regulations,
regulating customs on a
bridge in
modern Asten...
- suc****bed", but this text is ambiguous. Alternatively, the so-called
Raffelstetten Customs Regulations mentions the "markets of the Moravians"
around 905...
-
Alpine p****es in Austria, to
reach Venice. A
record of
tolls paid in
Raffelstetten (903–906), near St.
Florian on the Danube,
describes such merchants...
-
according to Spiesz, the
Moravian state ceased to
exist in 907. The
Raffelstetten Customs Regulations,
which was
issued in the
years 903–906,
still refers...
-
early commerce of London,
comparable with
Continental sources like
Raffelstetten customs regulations for
tolls on the
River Danube. The text is a key...