Must be about 40 years ago that I read, that I read the translation of the original edition. The approach of the original has withstood the test of time, when it comes to detail, the enormous growth of new knowledge had to be taken into account. Nils Jörn and Volker Henn took the task to update the book, on the one hand this was quite useful, on the other hand it is also the reason which finally convinced me not to give the book five stars, because in my opinion such alterations should be made transparent.
No other book I know deals with the German Hansa with such detail, from its beginnings (which are also related to the beginnings of he city of Lübeck) until its final demise in 1669. Unlike other works Dillinger deals only briefly with the administration of the remaining Hanseatic institutions by Lübeck, Hamburg and Bremen well into the 19th century. More attention is paid to trade in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea before the emergence of the Hansa, and the decisive role Cologne played in the early period.
Whereas other histories of the Hansa focus very much on its role in Northern and Eastern Europe Dollinger highlights the close connections of the this association with the Western and South Eastern European powers including its involvement in the Rose Wars. He deals with the unclear status of the association (of merchants? of trading cities?) which the Hansa at times used to its advantage, but which finally turned out to be one of its weak points. Much attention is paid to the constant conflicts of interest between specific cities and regional subsections, as well as the conflicts with the emerging principalities against which many smaller members could not defend their independence. Finally the Hansa had to compete against better organized forces, in particular the Netherlands, but also the Merchant Adventurers and the South German trading houses. So the Hansa slowly lost its importance. Lübeck, Cologne, Bremen, Danzig and increasingly Hamburg remained important centers of trade, but for that they did no longer rely on the Hansa.
Philippe Dollinger was born in Strasbourg under German rule in 1904, and German was as usual back then in Alsace his mother tongue. He studied at the now French university in his hometown in the 1920s when Marc Bloch, Charles-Edmond Perrin and Lucien Febvre prepared the ground for the Annales school. The work clearly shows the influence of that approach, but it is luckily also free from its excesses. Dollinger pays much attention to the economic and technological development, as well as the cultural history. But he does never go so far to neglect the development of institutions and above all events.