
300px|thumb|Moldauhafen from the air Moldauhafen is a lot in the port of Hamburg, Germany, that Czechoslovakia acquired on a 99-year lease in 1929 pursuant to the Treaty of Versailles. In 1993, the Czech Republic received the right to the port after the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. The lease will expire in 2028. The lot (the name of which is German for "Vltava port") gives the Czech Republic access to the sea via the Vltava and Elbe rivers.
300px|thumb|Moldauhafen from the air Moldauhafen is a lot in the port of Hamburg, Germany, that Czechoslovakia acquired on a 99-year lease in 1929 pursuant to the Treaty of Versailles. In 1993, the Czech Republic received the right to the port after the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. The lease will expire in 2028. The lot (the name of which is German for "Vltava port") gives the Czech Republic access to the sea via the Vltava and Elbe rivers.
Previously, a similar arrangement existed for the port of Stettin, now Szczecin, Poland.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).