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{{Short description|German privateer and nobleman (c. 1430 – 1491)}}
{{unreferenced}}
] at the ] ] '']''. The image is based on the notion of them having reached America and also encountered a ].<ref>Hughes, 2004, p. 513.</ref>]]
'''Didrik Pining''' also ''Dietrich'' or ''Diderik'' (born ca. ] in ], ] &ndash; ] ]) is claimed to have discovered ] in ], twenty years before ]. He was the captain of a German-led, Danish-sponsored, and Portuguese-financed expedition seeking a northwestern route to ]. Pining is said to have landed with three ships in ] on ] and ] together with ] also from ] and ] from ]. The steersman was Johannes Scolvus aka ] from Poland.


'''Didrik Pining''' ({{circa}} 1430 – 1491)<ref>Hughes, 2004, pp. 504 and 506.</ref> was a German ], nobleman, and governor of Iceland and ].<ref name="DidrikPiningSNL">{{cite web|work=]|url=http://snl.no/Didrik_Pining|title=Didrik Pining|language=no|date=6 October 2010}}</ref>
Didrik Pining was a nobleman who began his career as a ] hunting down English raiders and merchant ships in the ]. Later he was the governor of ].


In 1925, researcher Sofus Larson proposed that Pining may have landed in North America in the 1470s, almost twenty years before ] voyages of discovery.<ref>Hughes, 2004, p. 503.</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Expedition to Newfoundland 1472 |url=https://www.medieval.eu/expedition-newfoundland-1472/ |website=Medieval Histories |access-date=18 May 2021 |date=2016-04-07}}</ref> Some of the claims concerning Pining are controversial because information about him is relatively sparse and partially contradictory.<ref name="DidrikPiningSNL"/>


==Biography==
{{Germany-bio-stub}}
{{explorer-stub}}


===Early life===
]
Didrik Pining has been found by modern German genealogists{{who|date=January 2025}} to have been a native of ] in Germany, and this has been, according to a report, "suddenly and conclusively proved."<ref name="Thomas2003">Hughes, 2003.</ref> It had been assumed that he was a Dane or Norwegian until the 1930s.<ref name=h504>Hughes, 2004, p. 504.</ref>
]
]
]


In ] records until 1468, he is mentioned as a ] or naval captain in the service of ], charged with hunting down English merchant ships in the North Atlantic.<ref name="Thomas2003"/><ref name=h504/> From 1468 to 1478, he was in the service of ] (by 1470 as an "admiral")<ref>Hughes, 2004, pp. 504–05.</ref> first under ] (ruled 1448–1481), and later for his son, ] (ruled 1481–1513).<ref name="DidrikPiningSNL"/> Before his employment by the Danes, Pining and his partner ] had also been regarded by the ] as "pirates who did much damage to the Hanse towns."<ref name=friedland>Friedland, 1984, p. 541.</ref> During the later years of the reign of Christian I, Pining and Pothorst are said to have distinguished themselves "not less as capable seamen than as matchless freebooters."<ref name="p125">Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 125.</ref>
]

===Alleged trip to America===
====Sofus Larsen's theory====
The theory of the Pining voyage reaching America was published for the first time by Sofus Larsen of the ] in his book ''The Discovery of North America Twenty Years Before Columbus'' in 1925.<ref name="Thomas2003"/> Larsen based his claims on various sources (mainly three) which had no immediately apparent connection.<ref name=jen186/> Pining was according to Larsen appointed leader of an expedition to the north towards Greenland in the early 1470s.<ref name="Thomas2003"/> He, together with Hans Pothorst (also from Hildesheim), and the Portuguese explorers ] and ], were said to have been the principals in the expedition. The navigator was supposedly the semi-mythical figure named ]. According to Larsen, the mission likely started off from ], went on through to ] and Greenland, and eventually discovered '']'', the "Land of Codfish", later presumed to be ] or ].<ref name="DidrikPiningSNL"/><ref name="Thomas2003"/> While it is known that Pining and Corte-Real were respectively appointed governors of Iceland (1478) and the ] (1474), these appointments were according to Larsen a reward for having discovered the Land of Codfish.<ref name="Thomas2003"/>

====General research====
Larsen's claims have enjoyed strong scholarly and public support in ] and Portugal, but they have been more disputed among German scholars. Reception of the account by American and English historians has generally ranged from ridicule to acceptance of the plausibility of at least part of it.<ref name="Thomas2003"/> Many further circumstances are known to support the theory, although it is generally concluded that the theory is "not proven" (nor sufficiently "disproven"), with any possible "final proof" lacking.<ref>Hughes, 2004, p. 523.</ref>

Regardless, no sources explicitly support that Pining and Pothorst had any connections with the journey by Corte-Real, nor that they reached North America (excluding Greenland).<ref>Seaver, 1997, p. 199.</ref> What is known however, is that Pining and Pothorst were sent out by a royal Danish order to find out which of several possible policies concerning trade in Iceland should be developed, in which settlements and harbours. Pining's orders further included investigating what formerly, in the 11th century, had been called the ''regiones finitimae'' (i.e. "the coasts opposite those still-remembered but obsolete settlements in Greenland").<ref name=friedland/> In 1476, they made this trip, which likely went to Greenland, where they were reported to have encountered hostile ], and no ].<ref name=mills/> The location they visited is assumed by some to have been around ].<ref name=mills>Mills, 2003, p. 273.</ref> Nothing specific suggests it went further west than this.<ref name=dif>Diffie, 1977, p. 449.</ref>

===Later years===
In 1478, Didrik Pining became the governor (''höfuðsmaðr'')<ref name=seav200>Seaver, 1997, p. 200.</ref> of Iceland,<ref>Hughes, 2004, p. 505.</ref> serving until 1481, when he is mentioned as having "fared out of Iceland."<ref name="p125"/> He replaced the former governor ], whose struggle to marry his own cousin Ingvild was supported by Pining. The following year, Thorleif gave Pining silver and a horn of ] to pay the king for a license for his union. The agreement was constituted in 1484, merging two of Iceland's most fortunate political dynasties. In the same year, there came complaints of Pining and his men having raped women and stolen money from farmers.<ref name=seav200/> In 1481, Pining was present at the funeral of Danish king Christian I.<ref name=h506>Hughes, 2004, p. 506.</ref> He also made state visits of homage to ] and ], became ]ed in Norway, and employed his personal coat of arms which featured a ].<ref name=h506/> Some years later, in 1489 and 1490, he is again described as "governor (''hirdstjore'') over the whole of Iceland" in two Icelandic laws or edicts (the so-called Pining's Laws). A later chronicler says about him that "he was in many ways a serviceable man and put many things right that were wrong."<ref name="p125"/> His godson and nephew, Didrik Pining the Younger, succeeded him in 1490, and was governor for the two following years.<ref name=h506/>

Pining, together with Hans Pothorst, patrolled North Atlantic waters and played prominent roles in the Anglo-Danish Naval War (1484–90).<ref name=jen185>Jensen, 2007, p. 185.</ref> Around 1484, he captured, off the coast of England or ] and in the Spanish Sea, three Spanish or Portuguese ships which he brought to King ] in Copenhagen.<ref name="p125"/> He accompanied John to Bergen in 1486 as admiral of the royal fleet.<ref name=jen18586>Jensen, 2007, p. 185-86.</ref> In 1487, he led a fleet to the island of ] in the ], and secured it for Denmark.<ref name="DidrikPiningSNL"/><ref name=jen18586/> In a treaty concluded between John of Denmark and the Dutch in 1490, it is, however, expressly stated that Didrik Pining (and another admiral named Bartold Busch)<ref>Daae, 1887, p. 240.</ref> were to be excluded from the peace. He was then also spoken of as a lord of Iceland. In the same year, Pining was appointed governor of ], and may thus have been commander-in-chief of the seas and lands in northern waters.<ref name="p126">Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 126.</ref>

Didrik Pining likely died (was possibly killed) around ] or the ] in 1491.<ref name=h506/> In the '']'', Pining (and Pothorst) are mentioned among many pirates who "met with a miserable death, being either slain by their friends or hanged on the gallows or drowned in the waves of the sea,"<ref name="p129">Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 129.</ref> although this has been disputed by some modern historians.<ref name=jen185/>

==Later references==
In a letter to ] in 1551, the mayor of ], Carsten Griep, sent the king two maps of the north Atlantic made during the expeditions of Pining and Pothorst, "who were sent out by your majesty's royal grandfather King Christian the First, at the request of his majesty of Portugal, with certain ships to explore new countries and islands in the north, have raised on the rock '']'', lying off Greenland and towards '']'' in Iceland on the sea, a great sea-mark on account of the Greenland pirates (presumably ])."<ref name="p127">Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 127.</ref><ref>Stefansson, 2005, p. 84.</ref>

]' account is illustrated by one of his woodcuts (seen above), resembling the southern Greenland coast where Hvidserk is seen, and the explorers combating ]s.<ref>Hughes, 2004, p. 515.</ref>]]
] wrote in 1555 that Pining and Pothorst, due to their piracy, had "by the Nordic kings been excluded from all human contact and declared outlaws, as a result of their extremely violent robberies and numerous cruel acts against all sailors that they could catch, whether close or distant." They then took refuge at a cliff called Hvidserken, which apparently was located between Iceland and Greenland.<ref name=dp244>Daae, 1887, p. 244.</ref> Magnus added that in "1494", the pirates created a giant compass out of a considerable circular space at the top of the cliff, with rings and lines formed of lead, to make it easier for them to know in which direction they could seek a great plunder. Modern historians have suggested that they may in fact have set up some mark at the coast of Greenland to reclaim it for the Danish king.<ref name=jen186>Jensen, 2007, p. 186.</ref>

In 1625, a report from London talks about Pining and Pothorst (''Punnus'' and ''Potharse'') and states that Pining "gave the Islanders their Lawes," referred to later as Pining's Law, the written ].<ref name="p126"/>

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

==Footnotes==
{{reflist|20em}}

==References==
{{refbegin|colwidth=60em}}
*{{Cite journal|publisher=]|url=https://archive.org/stream/historisktidssk66foregoog/historisktidssk66foregoog_djvu.txt|title=Didrik Pining|first=Ludvig|last=Daae|year=1887|pages=232–245}}
* {{citation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vtZtMBLJ7GgC&dq=Terra+do+Bacalhao&pg=PA447|title=Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415–1580|first1=Bailey Wallys|last1=Diffie|first2=Boyd C.|last2=Shafer|first3=George Davison|last3=Winius|publisher=U of Minnesota Press|pages=446–449|isbn=9780816607822|year=1977}}
*{{Citation|title=The Hanseatic League and Hanse Towns in the Early Penetration of the North|url=http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic37-4-539.pdf|first1=Klaus|last1=Friedland|year=1984|publisher=Arctic|volume=37|pages=538–543|issue=4}}
*{{Citation|title=The German Discovery of America: A Review of the Controversy over Didrik Pining's Voyage of Exploration in 1473 in the North Atlantic|url=http://www.ghi-dc.org/publications/ghipubs/bu/033/79.pdf|first=Thomas L.|last=Hughes|year=2003|publisher=] Bulletin|issue=33|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927204928/http://www.ghi-dc.org/publications/ghipubs/bu/033/79.pdf|archive-date=2007-09-27}}
*{{Citation|title=The German discovery of America. A review of the controversy over Pining's 1473 voyage of exploration|url=http://www.people.carleton.edu/~dprowe/GSR-AbstOct04.html|first=Thomas L.|last=Hughes|year=2004|publisher=]|volume=27|pages=503–526|issue=3|access-date=2007-07-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120729020115/http://www.people.carleton.edu/~dprowe/GSR-AbstOct04.html|archive-date=2012-07-29|url-status=dead}}
*{{Citation|title=Denmark and the Crusades, 1400–1650|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6mWY_r7C2VsC&dq=pini+1971+pining&pg=PA186|first1=Janus Møller|last1=Jensen|year=2007|publisher=BRILL|isbn= 9789004155794|pages=124–129}}
*{{Citation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PYdBH4dOOM4C&dq=didrik+pining+hamburg&pg=PA273|title=Exploring polar frontiers: a historical encyclopedia, Volume 2|last=Mills|first=William James|year=2003|page=273|isbn= 9781576074220|publisher=ABC-CLIO}}
*{{Citation|title=In Northern Mists: Arctic Exploration in Early Times|url=https://archive.org/stream/innorthernmistsa02nansuoft/innorthernmistsa02nansuoft_djvu.txt|first1=Fridtjof|last1=Nansen|first2=Arthur G.|last2=Chater|year=1911|publisher=Frederick A. Stokes co.volume ii. |pages=124–129}}
*{{Citation|title=The Frozen Echo: Greenland and the Exploration of North America, ca. A.D. 1000–1500|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5qonlDkZW3MC&dq=Didrik+Pining+-wikipedia&pg=PA202|first1=Kirsten A.|last1=Seaver|year=1996|publisher=Stanford University Press|volume=37|isbn=0-8047-3161-6|page=202|issue=4}}
*{{citation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nirPnnbkO9IC&dq=Punnus+and+Potharse&pg=PA83|title=Great Adventures and Explorations: From the Earliest Times to the Present as Told by the Explorers Themselves|year=2005|first=Vilhjalmur|last=Stefansson|pages=83–84|publisher=Kessinger Publishing|isbn=9781417990900}}
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
{{refbegin|colwidth=60em}}
*{{Citation|title=The role of 'sibling rivalry' in the '(Re)discovery' of America controversy|first=Norman|last=Berdichevsky|year=1991|publisher=Journal of Cultural Geography|volume=3|pages=59–68|issue=12/1}}
* {{cite book |last=Enterline |first=James Robert |others=Center for American Places |title=Erikson, Eskimos & Columbus |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Pr-s7MrkBW8C&dq=Didrik+Pining+-wikipedia&pg=PA195 |access-date=July 2, 2009 |edition=illustrated |year=2002 |publisher=JHU Press |isbn=0-8018-6660-X |page=195 }}
*{{Citation|title=Eine Expedition nach Grönland im Jahre 1473|first=Klaus-Peter|last=Kiedel|year=1980|publisher=Deutsches Schiffahrtsarchiv|volume=3|pages=115–140}}
*{{Citation|title=Northern Approaches. Before Columbus: Early European Visitors to the Shores of the "New World"|first=Robert|last=McGhee|year=1992|publisher=Beaver|volume=72|pages=6–23}}
*{{Citation|title=Der Hildesheimer Didrik Pining als Entdecker Amerikas, als Admiral und als Gouverneur von Island im Dienste der Könige von Dänemark, Norwegen und Schweden|first=Paul|last=Pini|year=1971|location=Hildesheim}}
{{refend}}
{{Pirates}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pining, Didrik}}
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 19:39, 7 January 2025

German privateer and nobleman (c. 1430 – 1491)
Figures from modern times (20th century) of Pining and his partner Pothorst by Bernhard Hoetger at the Bremen Böttcherstraße Haus des Glockenspiels. The image is based on the notion of them having reached America and also encountered a Native American.

Didrik Pining (c. 1430 – 1491) was a German privateer, nobleman, and governor of Iceland and Vardøhus.

In 1925, researcher Sofus Larson proposed that Pining may have landed in North America in the 1470s, almost twenty years before Columbus' voyages of discovery. Some of the claims concerning Pining are controversial because information about him is relatively sparse and partially contradictory.

Biography

Early life

Didrik Pining has been found by modern German genealogists to have been a native of Hildesheim in Germany, and this has been, according to a report, "suddenly and conclusively proved." It had been assumed that he was a Dane or Norwegian until the 1930s.

In Hanseatic records until 1468, he is mentioned as a privateer or naval captain in the service of Hamburg, charged with hunting down English merchant ships in the North Atlantic. From 1468 to 1478, he was in the service of Denmark (by 1470 as an "admiral") first under Christian I of Denmark (ruled 1448–1481), and later for his son, John of Denmark (ruled 1481–1513). Before his employment by the Danes, Pining and his partner Hans Pothorst had also been regarded by the Hanseatic League as "pirates who did much damage to the Hanse towns." During the later years of the reign of Christian I, Pining and Pothorst are said to have distinguished themselves "not less as capable seamen than as matchless freebooters."

Alleged trip to America

Sofus Larsen's theory

The theory of the Pining voyage reaching America was published for the first time by Sofus Larsen of the University of Copenhagen in his book The Discovery of North America Twenty Years Before Columbus in 1925. Larsen based his claims on various sources (mainly three) which had no immediately apparent connection. Pining was according to Larsen appointed leader of an expedition to the north towards Greenland in the early 1470s. He, together with Hans Pothorst (also from Hildesheim), and the Portuguese explorers João Vaz Corte-Real and Álvaro Martins, were said to have been the principals in the expedition. The navigator was supposedly the semi-mythical figure named John Scolvus. According to Larsen, the mission likely started off from Bergen, went on through to Iceland and Greenland, and eventually discovered Terra do Bacalhau, the "Land of Codfish", later presumed to be Newfoundland or Labrador. While it is known that Pining and Corte-Real were respectively appointed governors of Iceland (1478) and the Azores (1474), these appointments were according to Larsen a reward for having discovered the Land of Codfish.

General research

Larsen's claims have enjoyed strong scholarly and public support in Scandinavia and Portugal, but they have been more disputed among German scholars. Reception of the account by American and English historians has generally ranged from ridicule to acceptance of the plausibility of at least part of it. Many further circumstances are known to support the theory, although it is generally concluded that the theory is "not proven" (nor sufficiently "disproven"), with any possible "final proof" lacking.

Regardless, no sources explicitly support that Pining and Pothorst had any connections with the journey by Corte-Real, nor that they reached North America (excluding Greenland). What is known however, is that Pining and Pothorst were sent out by a royal Danish order to find out which of several possible policies concerning trade in Iceland should be developed, in which settlements and harbours. Pining's orders further included investigating what formerly, in the 11th century, had been called the regiones finitimae (i.e. "the coasts opposite those still-remembered but obsolete settlements in Greenland"). In 1476, they made this trip, which likely went to Greenland, where they were reported to have encountered hostile Inuit, and no Norse people. The location they visited is assumed by some to have been around Angmagssalik. Nothing specific suggests it went further west than this.

Later years

In 1478, Didrik Pining became the governor (höfuðsmaðr) of Iceland, serving until 1481, when he is mentioned as having "fared out of Iceland." He replaced the former governor Thorleif Björnsson, whose struggle to marry his own cousin Ingvild was supported by Pining. The following year, Thorleif gave Pining silver and a horn of walrus ivory to pay the king for a license for his union. The agreement was constituted in 1484, merging two of Iceland's most fortunate political dynasties. In the same year, there came complaints of Pining and his men having raped women and stolen money from farmers. In 1481, Pining was present at the funeral of Danish king Christian I. He also made state visits of homage to Bergen and Copenhagen, became knighted in Norway, and employed his personal coat of arms which featured a grappling hook. Some years later, in 1489 and 1490, he is again described as "governor (hirdstjore) over the whole of Iceland" in two Icelandic laws or edicts (the so-called Pining's Laws). A later chronicler says about him that "he was in many ways a serviceable man and put many things right that were wrong." His godson and nephew, Didrik Pining the Younger, succeeded him in 1490, and was governor for the two following years.

Pining, together with Hans Pothorst, patrolled North Atlantic waters and played prominent roles in the Anglo-Danish Naval War (1484–90). Around 1484, he captured, off the coast of England or Brittany and in the Spanish Sea, three Spanish or Portuguese ships which he brought to King John of Denmark in Copenhagen. He accompanied John to Bergen in 1486 as admiral of the royal fleet. In 1487, he led a fleet to the island of Gotland in the Baltic Sea, and secured it for Denmark. In a treaty concluded between John of Denmark and the Dutch in 1490, it is, however, expressly stated that Didrik Pining (and another admiral named Bartold Busch) were to be excluded from the peace. He was then also spoken of as a lord of Iceland. In the same year, Pining was appointed governor of Vardøhus, and may thus have been commander-in-chief of the seas and lands in northern waters.

Didrik Pining likely died (was possibly killed) around Finnmark or the North Cape in 1491. In the Skibby Chronicle, Pining (and Pothorst) are mentioned among many pirates who "met with a miserable death, being either slain by their friends or hanged on the gallows or drowned in the waves of the sea," although this has been disputed by some modern historians.

Later references

In a letter to Christian III of Denmark in 1551, the mayor of Kiel, Carsten Griep, sent the king two maps of the north Atlantic made during the expeditions of Pining and Pothorst, "who were sent out by your majesty's royal grandfather King Christian the First, at the request of his majesty of Portugal, with certain ships to explore new countries and islands in the north, have raised on the rock Wydthszerck, lying off Greenland and towards Sniefeldsiekel in Iceland on the sea, a great sea-mark on account of the Greenland pirates (presumably Inuit)."

Olaus Magnus' account is illustrated by one of his woodcuts (seen above), resembling the southern Greenland coast where Hvidserk is seen, and the explorers combating Eskimos.

Olaus Magnus wrote in 1555 that Pining and Pothorst, due to their piracy, had "by the Nordic kings been excluded from all human contact and declared outlaws, as a result of their extremely violent robberies and numerous cruel acts against all sailors that they could catch, whether close or distant." They then took refuge at a cliff called Hvidserken, which apparently was located between Iceland and Greenland. Magnus added that in "1494", the pirates created a giant compass out of a considerable circular space at the top of the cliff, with rings and lines formed of lead, to make it easier for them to know in which direction they could seek a great plunder. Modern historians have suggested that they may in fact have set up some mark at the coast of Greenland to reclaim it for the Danish king.

In 1625, a report from London talks about Pining and Pothorst (Punnus and Potharse) and states that Pining "gave the Islanders their Lawes," referred to later as Pining's Law, the written Icelandic law.

See also

Footnotes

  1. Hughes, 2004, p. 513.
  2. Hughes, 2004, pp. 504 and 506.
  3. ^ "Didrik Pining". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). 6 October 2010.
  4. Hughes, 2004, p. 503.
  5. "Expedition to Newfoundland 1472". Medieval Histories. 2016-04-07. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  6. ^ Hughes, 2003.
  7. ^ Hughes, 2004, p. 504.
  8. Hughes, 2004, pp. 504–05.
  9. ^ Friedland, 1984, p. 541.
  10. ^ Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 125.
  11. ^ Jensen, 2007, p. 186.
  12. Hughes, 2004, p. 523.
  13. Seaver, 1997, p. 199.
  14. ^ Mills, 2003, p. 273.
  15. Diffie, 1977, p. 449.
  16. ^ Seaver, 1997, p. 200.
  17. Hughes, 2004, p. 505.
  18. ^ Hughes, 2004, p. 506.
  19. ^ Jensen, 2007, p. 185.
  20. ^ Jensen, 2007, p. 185-86.
  21. Daae, 1887, p. 240.
  22. ^ Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 126.
  23. Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 129.
  24. Nansen and Chater, 1911, p. 127.
  25. Stefansson, 2005, p. 84.
  26. Hughes, 2004, p. 515.
  27. Daae, 1887, p. 244.

References

Further reading

  • Berdichevsky, Norman (1991), The role of 'sibling rivalry' in the '(Re)discovery' of America controversy, vol. 3, Journal of Cultural Geography, pp. 59–68
  • Enterline, James Robert (2002). Erikson, Eskimos & Columbus. Center for American Places (illustrated ed.). JHU Press. p. 195. ISBN 0-8018-6660-X. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  • Kiedel, Klaus-Peter (1980), Eine Expedition nach Grönland im Jahre 1473, vol. 3, Deutsches Schiffahrtsarchiv, pp. 115–140
  • McGhee, Robert (1992), Northern Approaches. Before Columbus: Early European Visitors to the Shores of the "New World", vol. 72, Beaver, pp. 6–23
  • Pini, Paul (1971), Der Hildesheimer Didrik Pining als Entdecker Amerikas, als Admiral und als Gouverneur von Island im Dienste der Könige von Dänemark, Norwegen und Schweden, Hildesheim{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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