Hans Schlitte was a salesman from
Goslar, Germany. He was born in the 2nd half of the 15th century, and died circa 1557.[1] In an unfortunate deal in
Pskov, he lost a large sum of money, and then traveled to
Moscow in order to attempt legal means of recovering the loss.
There, he was approached by the Tsar to hire Western experts, which led to the later case against him.
Case of Schlitte
The Case of Schlitte is a trial against Hans Schlitte which was held in 1548 in
Lübeck.
Ivan the Terrible asked Hans Schlitte to hire a lot of masters and doctors in order to bring European technologies and knowledge back to
Moscovia.
Schlitte managed to hire around 300 men. The first of the men tried to come to Moscovia through
Livonia, but were kept in Wenden (now
Cēsis, Latvia). The rest of hired men tried to reach Moscovia by sea, but also failed to do it.
Literature
К делу Ганса Шлитте // Копенгагенские акты, относящиеся к русской истории. Первый выпуск 1326—1569 гг. / Пер. Ю. Н. Щербачёва // Чтения в обществе истории и древностей Российских при Московском университете. — № 4. — Moscow, 1915.
Bernhard Diestelkamp, Eine versuchte Annäherung Zar Iwans IV., des Schrecklichen, an den Westen? Ein Reichskammergerichtsprozess, der dies Nahelegt. In: Reich, Regionen und Europa in Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Festschrift für Peter Moraw. Berlin 2000, lk 305–322.
P. Pierling S. I., Papes et tsars (1547-1597) d'après des documents nouveaux, Parigi Retaux-Bray, 1890, citato in La Civiltà Cattolica, serie XIV, volume V, fascicolo 959, 1890, pag. 714-715.
Google Books
Rusakovskiy, Oleg (2017). Das erste russische Militärrecht für fremde Söldner? [The first Russian military law for foreign mercenaries?] (in German).
OCLC1199724316.
References
^According to the Italian article; reference unclear.