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League (unit)

A league is a unit of length. It was common in Europe and Latin America, but is no longer an official unit in any nation. Derived from an ancient Celtic unit and adopted by the Romans as the leuga, the league became a common unit of measurement throughout western Europe. It may have originally represented, roughly, the distance a person could walk in an hour.[1] Since the Middle Ages, many values have been specified in several countries.

Different definitions

Ancient Rome

The league was used in Ancient Rome, defined as 1½ Roman miles (7,500 Roman feet, modern 2.2 km or 1.4 miles). The origin is the leuga Gallica (also: leuca Callica), the league of Gaul.[2]

Argentina

The Argentine league (legua) is 5.572 km (3.462 mi) or 6,666 varas: 1 vara is 0.83 m (33 in).[3]

England

On land, the league is most commonly defined as three miles (4.83km), though the length of a mile could vary from place to place and depending on the era. At sea, a league is three nautical miles (3.452 miles; 5.556 kilometres). English usage also included many of the other leagues mentioned below (for example, in discussing the Treaty of Tordesillas).

France

The French lieue — at different times — existed in several variants, namely 10,000, 12,000, 13,200 and 14,400 French feet, about 3.25 to 4.68 km (2.02 to 2.91 miles). It was used along with the metric system for a while, but is long discontinued.

A metric lieue was used in France from 1812 to 1840, with 1 metric lieue being exactly 4,000 m, or 4 km (about 2.5 mi).[4] It is this unit that is referenced in both the title and the body text of Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1870).[5]

Mexico

Perhaps in some rural parts of Mexico, the league (Spanish legua) is still used in the original sense of the distance that can be covered on foot in an hour, so that a league along a good road on level ground is a greater distance than a league on a difficult path over rough terrain.[6]

Portugal

In Portugal, Brazil and other parts of the former Portuguese Empire, there were several units called league (Portuguese: légua):

  • Légua of 18 to a degree = 6,172.84 metres
  • Légua of 20 to a degree (Maritime légua) = 5,555.56 metres
  • Légua of 25 to a degree = 4,444.44 metres

The names of the several léguas referred to the number of units that made the length corresponding to an angle degree of a meridian arc.

As a transitory measure, after Portugal adopted the metric system, the metric légua, of 5.0 km, was used.

In Brazil, the légua is still used occasionally, where it has been described as about 6.6 km.

Spain

 
Milestone in the Province of Ávila, Spain indicating a distance of 9 leagues to the city of Ávila

The legua or Spanish league was originally understood as equivalent to 3 millas (Spanish miles).[7] This varied depending on local standards for the pie (Spanish foot) and on the precision of measurement, but was officially equivalent to 4,180 metres (2.6 miles) before the legua was abolished by Philip II in 1568. It remains in use in parts of Latin America, where its exact meaning varies.

  • Legua nautica (nautical league): Between 1400 and 1600 the Spanish nautical league was equal to four Roman miles of 4,842 feet, making it 19,368 feet (5,903 metres or 3.1876 modern nautical miles). However, the accepted number of Spanish nautical leagues to a degree varied between 14 1/6 to 16 2/3, so in actual practice the length of a Spanish nautical league was 25,733 feet (4.235 modern nautical miles) to 21,874 feet (3.600 modern nautical miles) respectively.[7]
  • Legua de por grado (league of the degree): From the 15th century through the early 17th century, the Spanish league of the degree was based on four Arabic miles. Although most contemporary accounts used an Arabic mile of 6 444 feet (1,964 metres), which gave a Spanish league of the degree of 25,776 feet (7,857 metres or 4.242 modern nautical miles) others defined an Arabic mile as just 6,000 feet making a Spanish league of the degree 24,000 feet (or 7,315 metres, almost exactly 3.95 modern nautical miles).[8]
  • Legua geographica or geográfica (geographical league): Starting around 1630 the Spanish geographical league was used as the official nautical measurement and continued so through the 1840s. Its use on Spanish charts did not become mandatory until 1718. It was four millias (miles) in length. From 1630 to 1718 a millia was 5,564 feet (1 696 metres), making a geographical league of four millias equal 22,256 feet (6,784 m or 3.663 modern nautical miles). But from 1718 through the 1830s the millia was defined as the equivalent of just over 5,210 feet, giving a shorter geographical league of just over 20,842 feet (6,353 m or 3.430 modern nautical miles).[7]
  • Legua marítima (maritime league): From around 1840 through the early 20th century, a Spanish marine league equaled 18,263.52 feet (5,566.72 metres or 3.00579 modern nautical miles).[7]

In the early Hispanic settlements of New Mexico, Texas, California, and Colorado, a league was also a unit of area, defined as 25 million square varas or about 4,428.4 acres.[9] This usage of league is referenced frequently in the Texas Constitution. So defined, a league of land would encompass a square that is one Spanish league on each side.

Comparison table

A comparison of the different lengths for a "league", in different countries and at different times in history, is given in the table below. Miles are also included in this list because of the linkage between the two units.

Length (m) Name Where used From To Definition Remarks
01,000 (for comparison) 1 kilometer
01,280.16 kawtha Myanmar today 20 out-thaba Myanmar units of measurement
01,482 mille passus, milliarium Roman Empire Ancient Roman units of measurement
01,486.6 miglio[10] Sicily
01,500 Persian mile Persia
01,524 London mile England
01,609.3426 (statute) mile Great Britain 1592 1959 1,760 yards Over the course of time, the length of a yard changed several times and consequently so did the English (and, from 1824, Imperial) mile. The statute mile was introduced in 1592 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I
01,609.344 mile some Anglosaxon countries 1959 today 1,760 yards On 1 July 1959, the imperial mile was standardized to an exact length in metres
01,609.3472 (statute) mile United States 1893 today 1,760 yards From 1959; also called the U.S. Survey Mile. From then its only utility has been land survey, before it was the standard mile. From 1893 its exact length in metres was: 3,600/3,937 × 1760
01 820 Italy
01,852 nautical mile international today 1,852 m Symbol: nmi; Abbreviation: NM
01,852.3 (for comparison) 1 meridian minute
01,853.181 Turkish (nautical) mile Turkey 1933 today
01,855.4 (for comparison) 1 equatorial minute Though the NM was defined on the basis of the minute, it varies from the equatorial minute, because at that time people could only estimate the circumference of the equator to be 40,000 km.
01,894.35 Ottoman mile Ottoman Empire 1933 5,000 ayak Ottoman units of measurement
02,065 Portugal
02,220 Gallo-Roman league Gallo-Roman culture 1+12 miles Under the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus, this replaced the Roman mile as the official unit of distance in the Gallic and Germanic provinces, although there were regional and temporal variations.[11]
02,470 Sardinia, Piemont
02,622 Scotland
02,880 Ireland
03,780 Flanders
03,898 French lieue (post league) France 2,000 "body lengths"
04,000 general or metric league
04,000 legue Guatemala
04,179.4 legua antigua
(old league)
Spain 1568
04,190 legue Mexico[12] = 2,500 tresas = 5,000 varas
04,444.8 landleuge 125° of a circle of longitude
04,452.2 lieue commune France Units of measurement in France before the French Revolution
04,513 legue Paraguay
04,513 legua Chile,[12] (Guatemala, Haiti) = 36 cuadros = 5,400 varas
04,531 Wegstunde Saxony[13] 1722 1840 1 000 Dresden rods introduced on occasion of a countrywide road survey
04,808 Switzerland
04,828 English land league England 3 miles
04,800
04,900
Germanic rasta, also doppelleuge
(double league)
05,000 légua nova Portugal[12]
05,120.64 ga-wout (Burmese league) Myanmar today 4 kawtha Myanmar units of measurement
05,196 legua Bolivia[12] = 40 ladres
05,152 legua argentina Argentina, Buenos Aires[12] = 6 000 varas
05,154 legue Uruguay
05,200 Bolivian legua Bolivia
05,370 legue Venezuela
05,500 Portuguese légua Portugal
05,510 legue Ecuador
05,510 Ecuadorian legua Ecuador
05,532.5 Landleuge
(state league)
Prussia
05,540 legue Honduras
05,556 Seeleuge (nautical league) 120° of a circle of longitude
3 nautical miles
05,570 legua Spain and Chile Spanish customary units
05,572 legua Colombia[12] = 3 Millas
05,572.7 legue Peru[12] = 20,000 feet
05,572.7 legua antigua
old league
Spain[12] = 3 millas = 15,000 feet
05,590 légua Brazil[12] = 5,000 varas = 2,500 bracas
05,600 Brazilian légua Brazil
05,685 Fersah (Turkish league) Ottoman Empire 1933 3 Ottoman miles Derived from Persian Parasang.
05 840[14] Dutch mile Netherlands
06,197 légua antiga Portugal[12] = 3 milhas = 24 estadios
06,277 Luxembourg
06,280 Belgium
06,687.24 legua nueva
(new league)
Spain[12] 1766 = 8,000 Varas
06,797 Landvermessermeile
(state survey mile)
Saxony
07,400 Netherlands
07,409 (for comparison) 4 meridian minutes
07,419.2 Kingdom of Hanover
07,419.4 Duchy of Brunswick
07,420.4
07,414.9
Bavaria
07,420.439 geographic mile 115 equatorial grads
07,421.6 (for comparison) 4 equatorial minutes
07,448.7 Württemberg
07,450 Hohenzollern
07 467.6 Russia 7 werst Obsolete Russian units of measurement
07 480 Bohemia
07 500 kleine / neue Postmeile
(small/new postal mile)
Saxony 1840 German Empire, North German Confederation, Grand Duchy of Hesse, Russia
07,532.5 Land(es)meile
(German state mile)
Denmark, Hamburg, Prussia primarily for Denmark defined by Ole Rømer
07,585.9 Postmeile
(post mile)
Austria-Hungary Austrian units of measurement
07,850 Romania
08,800 Schleswig-Holstein
08,888.89 Baden
09,062 average Post- or Polizeimeile
(middle post mile or police mile)
Saxony[13] 1722
09,206.3 Electorate of Hesse
09,261.4 (for comparison) 5 meridian minutes
09,277 (for comparison) 5 equatorial minutes
09,323 alte Landmeile
(old state mile)
Hanover 1836
09,347 alte Landmeile
(old state mile)
Hanover 1836
09,869.6 Oldenburg
10,000 metric mile, Scandinavian mile Scandinavia still commonly used today, e.g. for road distances.; equates to the myriametre
10,044 große Meile
(great mile)
Westphalia
10,670 peninkulma Finland 1887
10,688.54 mil Sweden 1889
11,113.7 (for comparison) 6 meridian minutes
11,132.4 (for comparison) 6 equatorial minutes
11,295 mil Norway 1889 was equivalent to 3,000 Rhenish rods.

Similar units:

See also

References

  1. ^ Chardon, Roland (June 1980). "The Linear League in North America". Annals of the Association of Geographers. 70 (2): 131. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1980.tb01304.x. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
  2. ^ The Oxford English Dictionary
  3. ^ Espasa-Calpe Dictionary, Argentina and Mexico Edition 1945: headword Legua
  4. ^ François Cardarelli: Scientific Unit Conversion (Springer-Verlag London, 1999)
  5. ^ Jules Verne: Vingt mille lieues sous les mers (1871), Part 2, Chapter VII
    "Aussi, notre vitesse fut-elle de vingt-cinq milles à l’heure, soit douze lieues de quatre kilomètres. Il va sans dire que Ned Land, à son grand ennui, dut renoncer à ses projets de fuite. Il ne pouvait se servir du canot entraîné à raison de douze à treize mètres par seconde. Quitter le Nautilus dans ces conditions, c’eût été sauter d’un train marchant avec cette rapidité, manœuvre imprudente s’il en fut."
    "Accordingly, our speed was twenty–five miles (that is, twelve four–kilometre leagues) per hour. Needless to say, Ned Land had to give up his escape plans, much to his distress. Swept along at the rate of twelve to thirteen metres per second, he could hardly make use of the skiff. Leaving the Nautilus under these conditions would have been like jumping off a train racing at this speed, a rash move if there ever was one." Translated by F. P. Walter
  6. ^ Rani T. Alexander (2004). Yaxcabá and the Caste War of Yucatán: An Archaeological Perspective. UNM Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-8263-2962-2.
  7. ^ a b c d Spence, E. Lee. Spence's Guide to Shipwreck Research, p. 32. Narwhal Press (Charleston), 1997.
  8. ^ Spence's Guide to Shipwreck Research, by Dr. E. Lee Spence, Narwhal Press, Charleston/Miami, © by Edward L. Spence, 1997, p. 32
  9. ^ Vikki Gray (1998-12-24). . Vikki Gray. Archived from the original on 2007-06-08. Retrieved 2007-06-04.
  10. ^ Leopold Carl Bleibtreu: Handbuch der Münz-, Maß- und Gewichtskunde und des Wechsel-Staatspapier-, Bank- und Aktienwesens europäischer und außereuropäischer Länder und Städte. Verlag von J. Engelhorn, Stuttgart, 1863, p. 332
  11. ^ (in German)Pre-metric units of length
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Helmut Kahnt (1986), BI-Lexikon Alte Maße, Münzen und Gewichte (in German) (1 ed.), Leipzig: VEB Bibliographisches Institut, pp. 380
  13. ^ a b (in German). Forschungsgruppe Kursächsische Postmeilensäulen e.V. und 1. Sächsischer Postkutschenverein e.V. Archived from the original on February 5, 2017. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  14. ^ IKAR-Altkartendatenbank[permanent dead link] der Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Kartenabteilung.

league, unit, other, uses, league, disambiguation, league, unit, length, common, europe, latin, america, longer, official, unit, nation, derived, from, ancient, celtic, unit, adopted, romans, leuga, league, became, common, unit, measurement, throughout, wester. For other uses see League disambiguation A league is a unit of length It was common in Europe and Latin America but is no longer an official unit in any nation Derived from an ancient Celtic unit and adopted by the Romans as the leuga the league became a common unit of measurement throughout western Europe It may have originally represented roughly the distance a person could walk in an hour 1 Since the Middle Ages many values have been specified in several countries Contents 1 Different definitions 1 1 Ancient Rome 1 2 Argentina 1 3 England 1 4 France 1 5 Mexico 1 6 Portugal 1 7 Spain 2 Comparison table 3 See also 4 ReferencesDifferent definitions EditAncient Rome Edit See also Ancient Roman units of measurement The league was used in Ancient Rome defined as 1 Roman miles 7 500 Roman feet modern 2 2 km or 1 4 miles The origin is the leuga Gallica also leuca Callica the league of Gaul 2 Argentina Edit The Argentine league legua is 5 572 km 3 462 mi or 6 666 varas 1 vara is 0 83 m 33 in 3 England Edit See also English units of measurement On land the league is most commonly defined as three miles 4 83km though the length of a mile could vary from place to place and depending on the era At sea a league is three nautical miles 3 452 miles 5 556 kilometres English usage also included many of the other leagues mentioned below for example in discussing the Treaty of Tordesillas France Edit See also Units of measurement in France before the French Revolution The French lieue at different times existed in several variants namely 10 000 12 000 13 200 and 14 400 French feet about 3 25 to 4 68 km 2 02 to 2 91 miles It was used along with the metric system for a while but is long discontinued A metric lieue was used in France from 1812 to 1840 with 1 metric lieue being exactly 4 000 m or 4 km about 2 5 mi 4 It is this unit that is referenced in both the title and the body text of Jules Verne s novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas 1870 5 Mexico Edit Perhaps in some rural parts of Mexico the league Spanish legua is still used in the original sense of the distance that can be covered on foot in an hour so that a league along a good road on level ground is a greater distance than a league on a difficult path over rough terrain 6 Portugal Edit See also Portuguese customary units In Portugal Brazil and other parts of the former Portuguese Empire there were several units called league Portuguese legua Legua of 18 to a degree 6 172 84 metres Legua of 20 to a degree Maritime legua 5 555 56 metres Legua of 25 to a degree 4 444 44 metresThe names of the several leguas referred to the number of units that made the length corresponding to an angle degree of a meridian arc As a transitory measure after Portugal adopted the metric system the metric legua of 5 0 km was used In Brazil the legua is still used occasionally where it has been described as about 6 6 km Spain Edit See also Spanish customary units Milestone in the Province of Avila Spain indicating a distance of 9 leagues to the city of Avila The legua or Spanish league was originally understood as equivalent to 3 millas Spanish miles 7 This varied depending on local standards for the pie Spanish foot and on the precision of measurement but was officially equivalent to 4 180 metres 2 6 miles before the legua was abolished by Philip II in 1568 It remains in use in parts of Latin America where its exact meaning varies Legua nautica nautical league Between 1400 and 1600 the Spanish nautical league was equal to four Roman miles of 4 842 feet making it 19 368 feet 5 903 metres or 3 1876 modern nautical miles However the accepted number of Spanish nautical leagues to a degree varied between 14 1 6 to 16 2 3 so in actual practice the length of a Spanish nautical league was 25 733 feet 4 235 modern nautical miles to 21 874 feet 3 600 modern nautical miles respectively 7 Legua de por grado league of the degree From the 15th century through the early 17th century the Spanish league of the degree was based on four Arabic miles Although most contemporary accounts used an Arabic mile of 6 444 feet 1 964 metres which gave a Spanish league of the degree of 25 776 feet 7 857 metres or 4 242 modern nautical miles others defined an Arabic mile as just 6 000 feet making a Spanish league of the degree 24 000 feet or 7 315 metres almost exactly 3 95 modern nautical miles 8 Legua geographica or geografica geographical league Starting around 1630 the Spanish geographical league was used as the official nautical measurement and continued so through the 1840s Its use on Spanish charts did not become mandatory until 1718 It was four millias miles in length From 1630 to 1718 a millia was 5 564 feet 1 696 metres making a geographical league of four millias equal 22 256 feet 6 784 m or 3 663 modern nautical miles But from 1718 through the 1830s the millia was defined as the equivalent of just over 5 210 feet giving a shorter geographical league of just over 20 842 feet 6 353 m or 3 430 modern nautical miles 7 Legua maritima maritime league From around 1840 through the early 20th century a Spanish marine league equaled 18 263 52 feet 5 566 72 metres or 3 00579 modern nautical miles 7 In the early Hispanic settlements of New Mexico Texas California and Colorado a league was also a unit of area defined as 25 million square varas or about 4 428 4 acres 9 This usage of league is referenced frequently in the Texas Constitution So defined a league of land would encompass a square that is one Spanish league on each side Comparison table EditA comparison of the different lengths for a league in different countries and at different times in history is given in the table below Miles are also included in this list because of the linkage between the two units Length m Name Where used From To Definition Remarks0 1 000 for comparison 1 kilometer0 1 280 16 kawtha Myanmar today 20 out thaba Myanmar units of measurement0 1 482 mille passus milliarium Roman Empire Ancient Roman units of measurement0 1 486 6 miglio 10 Sicily0 1 500 Persian mile Persia0 1 524 London mile England0 1 609 3426 statute mile Great Britain 1592 1959 1 760 yards Over the course of time the length of a yard changed several times and consequently so did the English and from 1824 Imperial mile The statute mile was introduced in 1592 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I0 1 609 344 mile some Anglosaxon countries 1959 today 1 760 yards On 1 July 1959 the imperial mile was standardized to an exact length in metres0 1 609 3472 statute mile United States 1893 today 1 760 yards From 1959 also called the U S Survey Mile From then its only utility has been land survey before it was the standard mile From 1893 its exact length in metres was 3 600 3 937 17600 1 820 Italy0 1 852 nautical mile international today 1 852 m Symbol nmi Abbreviation NM0 1 852 3 for comparison 1 meridian minute0 1 853 181 Turkish nautical mile Turkey 1933 today0 1 855 4 for comparison 1 equatorial minute Though the NM was defined on the basis of the minute it varies from the equatorial minute because at that time people could only estimate the circumference of the equator to be 40 000 km 0 1 894 35 Ottoman mile Ottoman Empire 1933 5 000 ayak Ottoman units of measurement0 2 065 Portugal0 2 220 Gallo Roman league Gallo Roman culture 1 1 2 miles Under the reign of Emperor Septimius Severus this replaced the Roman mile as the official unit of distance in the Gallic and Germanic provinces although there were regional and temporal variations 11 0 2 470 Sardinia Piemont0 2 622 Scotland0 2 880 Ireland0 3 780 Flanders0 3 898 French lieue post league France 2 000 body lengths 0 4 000 general or metric league0 4 000 legue Guatemala0 4 179 4 legua antigua old league Spain 15680 4 190 legue Mexico 12 2 500 tresas 5 000 varas0 4 444 8 landleuge 1 25 of a circle of longitude0 4 452 2 lieue commune France Units of measurement in France before the French Revolution0 4 513 legue Paraguay0 4 513 legua Chile 12 Guatemala Haiti 36 cuadros 5 400 varas0 4 531 Wegstunde Saxony 13 1722 1840 1 000 Dresden rods introduced on occasion of a countrywide road survey0 4 808 Switzerland0 4 828 English land league England 3 miles0 4 8000 4 900 Germanic rasta also doppelleuge double league 0 5 000 legua nova Portugal 12 0 5 120 64 ga wout Burmese league Myanmar today 4 kawtha Myanmar units of measurement0 5 196 legua Bolivia 12 40 ladres0 5 152 legua argentina Argentina Buenos Aires 12 6 000 varas0 5 154 legue Uruguay0 5 200 Bolivian legua Bolivia0 5 370 legue Venezuela0 5 500 Portuguese legua Portugal0 5 510 legue Ecuador0 5 510 Ecuadorian legua Ecuador0 5 532 5 Landleuge state league Prussia0 5 540 legue Honduras0 5 556 Seeleuge nautical league 1 20 of a circle of longitude3 nautical miles0 5 570 legua Spain and Chile Spanish customary units0 5 572 legua Colombia 12 3 Millas0 5 572 7 legue Peru 12 20 000 feet0 5 572 7 legua antiguaold league Spain 12 3 millas 15 000 feet0 5 590 legua Brazil 12 5 000 varas 2 500 bracas0 5 600 Brazilian legua Brazil0 5 685 Fersah Turkish league Ottoman Empire 1933 3 Ottoman miles Derived from Persian Parasang 0 5 840 14 Dutch mile Netherlands0 6 197 legua antiga Portugal 12 3 milhas 24 estadios0 6 277 Luxembourg0 6 280 Belgium0 6 687 24 legua nueva new league Spain 12 1766 8 000 Varas0 6 797 Landvermessermeile state survey mile Saxony0 7 400 Netherlands0 7 409 for comparison 4 meridian minutes0 7 419 2 Kingdom of Hanover0 7 419 4 Duchy of Brunswick0 7 420 40 7 414 9 Bavaria0 7 420 439 geographic mile 1 15 equatorial grads0 7 421 6 for comparison 4 equatorial minutes0 7 448 7 Wurttemberg0 7 450 Hohenzollern0 7 467 6 Russia 7 werst Obsolete Russian units of measurement0 7 480 Bohemia0 7 500 kleine neue Postmeile small new postal mile Saxony 1840 German Empire North German Confederation Grand Duchy of Hesse Russia0 7 532 5 Land es meile German state mile Denmark Hamburg Prussia primarily for Denmark defined by Ole Romer0 7 585 9 Postmeile post mile Austria Hungary Austrian units of measurement0 7 850 Romania0 8 800 Schleswig Holstein0 8 888 89 Baden0 9 062 average Post or Polizeimeile middle post mile or police mile Saxony 13 17220 9 206 3 Electorate of Hesse0 9 261 4 for comparison 5 meridian minutes0 9 277 for comparison 5 equatorial minutes0 9 323 alte Landmeile old state mile Hanover 18360 9 347 alte Landmeile old state mile Hanover 18360 9 869 6 Oldenburg10 000 metric mile Scandinavian mile Scandinavia still commonly used today e g for road distances equates to the myriametre10 044 grosse Meile great mile Westphalia10 670 peninkulma Finland 188710 688 54 mil Sweden 188911 113 7 for comparison 6 meridian minutes11 132 4 for comparison 6 equatorial minutes11 295 mil Norway 1889 was equivalent to 3 000 Rhenish rods Similar units 1 066 8 metres verst see also Obsolete Russian units of measurement 3 200 metres kosh used in North Bihar India See also EditMedieval weights and measures for various definitions of the league List of obsolete units of measurement Portuguese customary units Spanish customary units Seven league boots Walking ParasangReferences Edit Chardon Roland June 1980 The Linear League in North America Annals of the Association of Geographers 70 2 131 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1980 tb01304 x Retrieved 19 October 2022 The Oxford English Dictionary Espasa Calpe Dictionary Argentina and Mexico Edition 1945 headword Legua Francois Cardarelli Scientific Unit Conversion Springer Verlag London 1999 Jules Verne Vingt mille lieues sous les mers 1871 Part 2 Chapter VII Aussi notre vitesse fut elle de vingt cinq milles a l heure soit douze lieues de quatre kilometres Il va sans dire que Ned Land a son grand ennui dut renoncer a ses projets de fuite Il ne pouvait se servir du canot entraine a raison de douze a treize metres par seconde Quitter le Nautilus dans ces conditions c eut ete sauter d un train marchant avec cette rapidite manœuvre imprudente s il en fut Accordingly our speed was twenty five miles that is twelve four kilometre leagues per hour Needless to say Ned Land had to give up his escape plans much to his distress Swept along at the rate of twelve to thirteen metres per second he could hardly make use of the skiff Leaving the Nautilus under these conditions would have been like jumping off a train racing at this speed a rash move if there ever was one Translated by F P Walter Rani T Alexander 2004 Yaxcaba and the Caste War of Yucatan An Archaeological Perspective UNM Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 8263 2962 2 a b c d Spence E Lee Spence s Guide to Shipwreck Research p 32 Narwhal Press Charleston 1997 Spence s Guide to Shipwreck Research by Dr E Lee Spence Narwhal Press Charleston Miami c by Edward L Spence 1997 p 32 Vikki Gray 1998 12 24 Land Measurement Conversion Guide Vikki Gray Archived from the original on 2007 06 08 Retrieved 2007 06 04 Leopold Carl Bleibtreu Handbuch der Munz Mass und Gewichtskunde und des Wechsel Staatspapier Bank und Aktienwesens europaischer und aussereuropaischer Lander und Stadte Verlag von J Engelhorn Stuttgart 1863 p 332 in German Pre metric units of length a b c d e f g h i j k Helmut Kahnt 1986 BI Lexikon Alte Masse Munzen und Gewichte in German 1 ed Leipzig VEB Bibliographisches Institut pp 380 a b Historie der Postsaulen in German Forschungsgruppe Kursachsische Postmeilensaulen e V und 1 Sachsischer Postkutschenverein e V Archived from the original on February 5 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 IKAR Altkartendatenbank permanent dead link der Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Kartenabteilung Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title League unit amp oldid 1135038767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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