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Found better matching article on English Wikipedia that can replace machine translated German article, already changed link there.
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"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treidelntowpaths, (timber) rafting, rowing, and warping (for example on river barges: people with a small boat rowed ahead and farther away from the big ship sank an anchor. Now the team on the big ship adducted themselves and the great boat with the rope (connected to the anchor), pulled the anchor again, and the tedious game began again. Cf. also the German Wikipedia article or its Google translation.)

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treideln, (timber) rafting, rowing, and warping (for example on river barges: people with a small boat rowed ahead and farther away from the big ship sank an anchor. Now the team on the big ship adducted themselves and the great boat with the rope (connected to the anchor), pulled the anchor again, and the tedious game began again. Cf. also the German Wikipedia article or its Google translation.)

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: towpaths, (timber) rafting, rowing, and warping (for example on river barges: people with a small boat rowed ahead and farther away from the big ship sank an anchor. Now the team on the big ship adducted themselves and the great boat with the rope (connected to the anchor), pulled the anchor again, and the tedious game began again. Cf. also the German Wikipedia article or its Google translation.)

I found another method: warping (no, not Warp 8, but with anchors and ropes)
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Stephen
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"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treideln, (timber) rafting, and rowing, and warping (for example on river barges: people with a small boat rowed ahead and farther away from the big ship sank an anchor. Now the team on the big ship adducted themselves and the great boat with the rope (connected to the anchor), pulled the anchor again, and the tedious game began again. Cf. also the German Wikipedia article or its Google translation.)

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treideln, (timber) rafting, and rowing.

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treideln, (timber) rafting, rowing, and warping (for example on river barges: people with a small boat rowed ahead and farther away from the big ship sank an anchor. Now the team on the big ship adducted themselves and the great boat with the rope (connected to the anchor), pulled the anchor again, and the tedious game began again. Cf. also the German Wikipedia article or its Google translation.)

Rollback to Revision 1
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Stephen
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"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: BurlaksTreideln, (timber) rafting, and rowing.

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Burlaks, (timber) rafting, and rowing.

"Were there other commonly used forms of travel by river?"

Yes, there were: Treideln, (timber) rafting, and rowing.

Point to english wikipedia rather than translated german
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edgerunner
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Stephen
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