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Replaces the URL-based PDF downloads in tg-load-sample-documents with seven curated, locally bundled documents covering diverse topics (recipes, Belgian beer, trade routes, corporate scandals, pets, fortifications, Bronze Age collapse). Documents are packaged as data files within trustgraph-cli and loaded from metadata.json, removing the dependency on external URLs and the doc-cache mechanism.
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Traditional Trade Routes of Pre-Modern Europe
Section 1: The Arteries (The Core Networks)
Network A: The Hanseatic Baltic Route
- Alternative Names: The Hansa Network, The Northern Guild Rim.
- Geographical Span: Spans from the North Sea across the Baltic Sea, linking London, Bruges, Lübeck, Danzig, and Novgorod.
- Primary Commodities: Timber, Fur, Flax, Stockfish, Amber.
- Downstream Dependencies: Provides raw materials for Western European shipbuilding and winter clothing markets.
Network B: The Venetian Maritime Route
- Alternative Names: The Levantine Silk Spoke, The Adriatic Lifeline.
- Geographical Span: Connects Venice through the Adriatic Sea, around Greece, to Constantinople and Alexandria.
- Primary Commodities: Silk, Pepper, Cinnamon, Alum, Glassware.
- Downstream Dependencies: Feeds the luxury markets of the Holy Roman Empire via alpine passes.
Section 2: Hub Cities & Commodity Crossings
Hub 1: Bruges (The Low Countries)
- Alternative Names: Brugge, The Flanders Staple.
- Geographical Intersection: The primary terminus where The Hanseatic Baltic Route meets Western European land routes.
The Staple Right Dispute (Critical Logic Test):
- The Guild Law: By ducal decree, all foreign merchants traveling through Flanders must unload their ships at Bruges and offer their goods for sale for a mandatory 15 days before they can proceed.
- The English Subversion: English wool merchants, seeking to bypass the Bruges tax, began smuggling raw wool directly to Antwerp, sparking an economic blockade by the Hanseatic League against English shipping.
Hub 2: Lübeck (The Baltic Capital)
- Alternative Names: Lubeca, The Queen of the Hansa.
- Geographical Intersection: Located in Northern Germany, acting as the administrative node connecting the North Sea (via the Kiel land-bridge) to the wider Baltic Sea.
- Resource Matrix: Completely dependent on the Lüneburg Salt Works for its primary processing industry (herring preservation).
Hub 3: Constantinople (The Gateway)
- Alternative Names: Byzantium, Istanbul, Miklagard.
- Geographical Intersection: The western terminus of the Silk Road land routes and the northern terminus of The Venetian Maritime Route.
- Controlling Entity: Transferred from Byzantine control to Ottoman control in 1453, altering the tariff structures for all Christian merchants.
Section 3: Specialized Commodities & Processing Nodes
Item 1: Lüneburg Salt
- Alternative Names: White Gold, Northern Brine.
- Origin: Extracted from the brine springs of Lüneburg, Germany.
- Process: Boiled in massive lead pans using timber sourced from local forests.
- Critical Dependency Link: This salt is shipped directly to Bergen (Norway) via Lübeck to pack and preserve Scania Herring. Without this specific salt supply, Baltic fish rots before reaching Western markets.
Item 2: Phocaean Alum
- Alternative Names: The Weaver's Fixative, Anatolian Alum.
- Origin: Mined in the hills of Phocaea (Asia Minor) under the jurisdiction of the Genoese Republic, later seized by regional powers.
- Process: Shipped via Mediterranean maritime routes to Flanders and Florence.
- Chemical Function: A mandatory chemical mordant required to fix dyes to wool and textiles. Without Alum, the famous Flemish textile industry cannot produce colored cloth.
Section 4: Geopolitical Disruptions & Chokepoints
- The Sound Toll Bottleneck: The King of Denmark levies a mandatory tax on all ships entering or leaving the Baltic Sea through the Øresund strait. A diplomatic dispute or military blockade of the Sound by Denmark instantly halts the flow of Russian timber to the English Royal Dockyards.
- The Sound-to-Salt Ripple Effect: If the forests around Lüneburg are depleted, salt production drops. This directly causes a collapse in the Bergen fish trade, which in turn causes a protein shortage and subsequent famine in the labor forces of the Flemish textile hubs.
- The Alum Monopolization: Following conflicts in the East, the discovery of a domestic alum mine in Tolfa (Papal States) in 1461 caused a massive geopolitical shift, as the Pope banned the import of "infidel alum" from the East, forcing Venetian merchants to pivot their supply lines inward.