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. The word originally meant the distance a person could walk in an hour. 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 Roman miles. The origin is the leuga Gallica , the league of Gaul.

Argentina

The Argentine league is or 6 666 varas: 1 vara is.

English-speaking world

On land, the league is most commonly defined as three miles, though the length of a mile could vary from place to place and depending on the era. At sea, a league is. English usage also included many of the other leagues mentioned below.

France

The French lieue – at different times – existed in several variants: 10 000, 12 000, 13 200 and 14 400 French feet, about. It was used along with the metric system for a while but is now 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. It is this unit that is mentioned both in the title and the body text of Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.

Mexico

Perhaps in some rural parts of Mexico, the league 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.

Portuguese-speaking world

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

The legua or Spanish league was originally understood as equivalent to . This varied depending on local standards for the pie and on the precision of measurement, but was officially equivalent to before the legua was abolished by Philip II in 1568. It remains in use in parts of Latin America, where its exact meaning varies.
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. 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 NameWhere usedFromToDefinitionRemarks
1 482mille passus, milliariumRoman EmpireAncient Roman units of measurement
1 486.6miglioSicily
1 500Persian milePersia
1 524London mileEngland
1 609.3426 mileGreat Britain159219591 760 yardsOver the course of time, the length of a yard changed several times and consequently so did the English mile. The statute mile was introduced in 1592 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I
1 609.344milesome Anglosaxon countries1959today1 760 yardsOn 1 July 1959 the imperial mile was standardized to an exact length in metres
1 609.3472 mileUnited States1893today1 760 yardsFrom 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: × 1760
1 820Italy
1 852nautical mileinternationaltoday1 852 mSymbol: nmi; Abbreviation: NM
1 852.31 meridian minute
1 853.181nautical mileTurkey
1 855.41 equatorial minuteThough 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.
2 065Portugal
2 220Gallo-Roman leagueGallo-Roman culture milesUnder 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.
2 470Sardinia, Piemont
2 622Scotland
2 880Ireland
3 780Flanders
3 898French lieue France2 000 "body lengths"
4 000general or metric league
4 000legueGuatemala-
4 179.4legua antigua
Spain1568
4 190legueMexico= 2500 tresas = 5000 varas
4 444.8landleuge° of a circle of longitude
4 452.2lieue communeFranceUnits of measurement in France before the French Revolution
4 513legueParaguay
4 513leguaChile, = 36 cuadros = 5 400 varas
4 531WegstundeSaxony172218401 000 Dresden rodsintroduced on occasion of a countrywide road survey
4 808Switzerland
4 828English land leagueEngland3 miles
4 800
4,900
Germanic rasta, also doppelleuge
5 000légua novaPortugal
5 196leguaBolivia= 40 ladres
5 152legua argentinaArgentina, Buenos Aires= 6 000 varas
5 154legueUruguay
5 200Bolivian leguaBolivia
5 370legueVenezuela
5 500Portuguese léguaPortugal
5 510legueEcuador
5 510Ecuadorian leguaEcuador
5 532.5Landleuge
Prussia
5 540legueHonduras
5 556Seeleuge ° of a circle of longitude
3 nautical miles
5 570leguaSpain and ChileSpanish customary units
5 572leguaColombia= 3 Millas
5 572.7leguePeru= 20 000 feet
5 572.7legua antigua
old league
Spain= 3 millas = 15 000 feet
5 590léguaBrazil= 5 000 varas = 2 500 bracas
5 600Brazilian léguaBrazil
5 685Fersah Ottoman Empire19334 Turkish milesDerived from Persian Parasang.
5 840Dutch mileNetherlands
6 197légua antigaPortugal= 3 milhas = 24 estadios
6 277Luxembourg
6 280Belgium
6 687.24legua nueva
Spain1766= 8 000 Varas
6 797Landvermessermeile''
Saxony
7 400Netherlands
7 4094 meridian minutes
7 419.2Kingdom of Hanover
7 419.4Duchy of Brunswick
7 420.4
7,414,9
Bavaria
7 420.439geographic mile equatorial grads
7 421.64 equatorial minutes
7 448.7Württemberg
7 450Hohenzollern
7 467.6Russia7 werstObsolete Russian units of measurement
7 480Bohemia
7 500kleine / neue Postmeile
Saxony1840German Empire, North German Confederation, Grand Duchy of Hesse, Russia
7 532.5Landmeile
Denmark, Hamburg, Prussiaprimarily for Denmark defined by Ole Rømer
7 585.9Postmeile
Austria-HungaryAustrian units of measurement
7 850Romania
8 800Schleswig-Holstein
8 888.89Baden
9 062average Post- or Polizeimeile
Saxony1722
9 206.3Electorate of Hesse
9 261.45 meridian minutes
9 2775 equatorial minutes
9 323alte Landmeile
Hanover1836
9 347alte Landmeile
Hanover1836
9 869.6Oldenburg
10 000metric mile, Scandinavian mileScandinaviastill commonly used today, e.g. for road distances.; equates to the myriametre
10 044große Meile
Westphalia
10 670peninkulmaFinland1887
10 688.54milSweden1889
11 113.76 meridian minutes
11 132.46 equatorial minutes
11 295milNorway1889was equivalent to 3 000 Rhenish rods.

Similar units: