Convert Mile (mi) to League (lea) instantly.
Mile to League conversion
1 Mile (mi) = 0.33333333 League (lea). To convert Mile to League, multiply the value by 0.33333333.
| Mile (mi) | League (lea) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.33333333 |
| 2 | 0.66666667 |
| 5 | 1.6666667 |
| 10 | 3.3333333 |
| 25 | 8.3333333 |
| 50 | 16.666667 |
| 100 | 33.333333 |
| 1000 | 333.33333 |
Frequently asked questions
How many League are in one Mile?
One Mile (mi) equals 0.33333333 League (lea).
How do I convert Mile to League?
To convert Mile to League, multiply the value by 0.33333333.
What is 10 Mile in League?
10 Mile = 3.3333333 League.
About these units
Mile (mi)
The mile, equal to 5,280 feet, is a legacy of a long history of measurement stretching back to Roman times. Its ancestor, the Roman "mille passus" (thousand paces), established a rough distance of 1,480 meters, which evolved through medieval and early modern Europe into various regional miles. The English statute mile was standardized in 1593 and survives today in the United States, the United Kingdom (for roadways), and a few other territories. Despite being a non-metric unit, the mile remains deeply embedded in cultural and infrastructural systems. Road networks in the US are laid out with mile markers; athletic events include the famed "one-mile run"; and many people intuitively judge driving distances in miles. Aviation and international travel sometimes reference statute miles, though nautical miles dominate in navigation. Its long history and familiarity keep the mile relevant even in a metric world.
League (lea)
The league is an old unit of distance whose length varied widely across cultures, usually somewhere between 2.4 and 5.5 kilometers. Historically, it represented the distance a person could walk in an hour. Maritime and overland leagues existed, further complicating the unit's consistency across regions. In literature—particularly in adventure writing such as Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas—the league became a poetic and evocative measure of great distances. Even when not scientifically precise, its cultural and narrative resonance helped cement its place in storytelling. Though obsolete in modern measurement, the league remains an evocative relic of pre-industrial travel, when human endurance served as a baseline for measurement.