The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2
Chapter 127
134–157.
80. DUCLAU, S.—_La Science populaire—Marco Polo, sa Vie et ses Voyages_. Par S. Duclau. Limoges, Eugène Ardant, s. d. [1889], 8vo, pp. 192.
81. PARKER, E. H. _Charchan_. (_China Review_, xviii. p. 261); _Hunting Lodges_ (_Ibid._, p. 261); _Barscol._ (_Ibid._); _Life Guards_ (p. 262); _Canfu or Canton_ (_Ibid._, xiv. pp. 358–359); _Kaunchis_ (_Ibid._, p. 359); _Polo_ (_Ibid._, xv., p. 249); _Marco Polo’s Transliterations_ (_Ibid._, xvi., p. 125); _Canfu_ (_Ibid._, p. 189).
82. SCHALLER, M.—_Marco Polo und die Texte seiner “Reisen”.—Programm der Kgl. Studien—Anstalt Burghausen für das Studienjahr 1889–90 von_ Michael Schaller, Kgl. Studienlehrer f.n. Sprachen. Burghausen, Russy, 8vo, pp. 57.
83. SEVERTZOW, Dr. NICOLAS. _Etudes de Géographie historique sur les anciens itinéraires à travers le Pamir, Ptolémée, Hiouen-Thsang, Song-yuen, Marco Polo_. (_Bul. Soc. Géog._, 1890, pp. 417–467, 553–610.)
(Marco Polo, pp. 583 _seqq._)
84. AMENT, W. S. _Marco Polo in Cambaluc: A Comparison of foreign and native Accounts_. (_Journ. Peking Orient. Soc._, III. No. 2, 1892, pp. 97–122.)
85. COLLINGRIDGE, GEORGE. _The Early Cartography of Japan. By George Collingridge_. (_Geographical Journal_, May, 1894, pp. 403–409.)—_Japan or Java? An Answer to Mr. George Collingridge’s Article on_ “The Early Cartography of Japan,” _by F. G. Kramp_. Overgedrukt uit het “Tijdschrift van het Koninklijk Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap, Jaargang 1894.” Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1894, 8vo, pp. 14. _The Early Cartography of Japan. By H. Yule Oldham._ (_Geographical Journal_, Sept. 1894, pp. 276–279.)
86. HIRTH, FRIED. _Ueber den Schiffsverkehr von Kinsay zu Marco Polo’s Zeit_. (_T’oung Pao_, Dec. 1894, pp. 386–390.)
87. DRAPEYRON, LUDOVIC.—_Le Retour de Marco Polo en 1295. Cathay et Sypangu_. (_Revue de Géographie_, Juillet, 1895, pp. 3–8.)
88. CORDIER, HENRI. _Centenaire de Marco Polo_. Paris, 1896, 8vo.
A Lecture with a Bibliography which is the basis of the list of this edition of Marco Polo.
89. MANLY.—_Marco Polo and the Squire’s Tale_. By John Matthews Manly. (_Publications of the Modern Language Association of America_, vol. xi. 1896, pp. 349–362.)
Cf. our Introduction, p. _128_.
90. SUEZ, IUMING C. _Marco Polo_. (_St. John’s Echo_, Shanghaï, Nov. 1899.)
91. NORDENSKIÖLD, A. E.—_Om det inflytande Marco Polos reseberättelse utöfvat på Gastaldis kartor öfver Asien_. (_ur Ymer, Tidskrift utgifven af Svenska Sällskapet för Antropologi och Geografi_, Årg. 1899, H. 1, pp. 33 to 42).
—————————— _The Influence of the “Travels of Marco Polo” on Jacobo Gastaldi’s Map of Asia_. (_Geog. Journal_, April, 1899, pp. 396 to 406.)
See _Introduction_, p. _137_.
92. CHAIX, PAUL. _Marco Polo_. (_Le Globe_, Soc. Géog. Genève, fév.–avril, 1900, pp. 84–94.)
93. LE STRANGE, GUY. _The Cities of Kirmān in the time of Hamd-Allah Mustawfi and Marco Polo_. (_J. R. As. Soc._, April, 1901, pp. 281–290.)
94. MURET, ERNEST. _Un fragment de Marco Polo_. Paris, 1901, 8vo., pp. 8.
From _Romania_, tom. xxx. See p. 547, _App. F._, 65.
95. GREAT EXPLORERS.—Marco Polo, Ferdinand Magellan, Mungo Park, Sir John Franklin, David Livingstone, Christopher Columbus, etc., etc. Thomas Nelson, London, 1902, 8vo, pp. 224.
Marco Polo, pp. _7–21_.
[1] [Sir Henry Yule expressed his regret to me that he had not the facility at Palermo to undertake this Bibliography which I consider as a legacy from the first and illustrious editor of this book.—H. C.]
APPENDIX I.—_Titles of Works which are cited by abbreviated References in this Book_.
ABDALLATIF. _Relation de l’Egypte_. Trad. par M. Silvestre de Sacy. Paris, 1810.
ABULPHARAGIUS. _Hist. Compend. Dynastiarum_, etc., _ab_ Ed. Pocockio. Oxon. 1663.
ABR. ROGER. See _La Porte ouverte_.
ACAD. _Mém. de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres_.
AIN-I-AKBARI or AIN. AKB. BL. refers to Blochmann’s Translation in _Bibliotheca Indica_. Calcutta, 1869, _seqq._
ALEXANDRIADE, _ou Chanson de Geste d’Alexandre-le-Grand, de_ Lambert Le Court _et_ Alex. de Bernay. Dinan et Paris, 1861, 12mo.
ALPHABETUM TIBETANUM _Missionum Apostolicarum commodo editum_; A. A. Georgii. Romae, 1762, 4to.
AM. EXOT. Engelbert Kaempfer’s _Amoenitatum Exoticarum Fasciculi V_. Lemgoviae, 1712.
AMYOT. _Mémoires concernant les Chinois_, etc. Paris v. y.
ARABS., ARABSHAH. _Ahmedis Arabsiadis Vitae ... Timuri ... Historia. Latine vertit ... _S. H. Manger. Franequerae, 1767.
ARCH. STOR. ITAL. _Archivio Storico Italiano_. Firenze, v. y.
ASSEMANI, _Bibliotheca Orientalis_. Romae, 1719–28.
ASTLEY. _A New General Collection of Voyages, etc._ London, 1745–1747.
AVA, MISSION TO, Narrative of Major Phayre’s. By Capt. H. Yule. London, 1858.
AYEEN AKBERY refers to Gladwin’s Transl., Calcutta, 1787.
BABER, Memoir of. Transl. by Leyden and Erskine. London, 1826.
BABER, E. COLBORNE. _Travels and Researches in Western China_. London, 1882, 8vo.
Vol. i. Pt. I. _Supp. Papers R. Geog. Society_.
BACON, ROGER. _Opus Majus_. Venet. 1750.
BAER UND HELMERSEN. _Beiträge zur Kenntniss des Russischen Reiches, etc._ St. Petersburg, 1839, _seqq._
BAUDUIN DE SEBOURC. _Li Romans de Bauduin de S., IIIᵉ Roy de Jherusalem_. Valenciennes, 1841, 2 vol. large 8vo.
BENJAMIN OF TUDELA. Quoted from T. Wright’s _Early Travels in Palestine_. Bohn, London, 1848.
BRETSCHNEIDER, DR. E. _Notes on Chinese Mediaeval Travellers to the West_. Shanghai, 1875, 8vo.
———————— _Archaeological and Historical Researches on Peking and its Environs_. Shanghai, 1876, 8vo.
———————— _Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic Sources_. London, 1888, 2 vol. 8vo.
———————— _History of European Botanical Discoveries in China_. London [St. Petersburg], 1898, 2 Pts. 8vo. Begins with _Marco Polo_, pp. 1–5.
All these works are most valuable.
BRIDGMAN, Rev. Dr. _Sketches of the Meaou-tszé_, transl. by. In _J. N. Ch. Br. R. As. Soc._ for Dec. 1859.
BROWNE’S _Vulgar Errors_, in Bohn’s Ed. of his Works. London, 1852.
BUCHON. _Chroniques Étrangères relatives aux Expéditions Françaises pendant le XIIIᵉ Siècle_. Paris, 1841.
BURNES, ALEX. _Travels into Bokhara_. 2nd Ed. London, 1835.
BÜSCHING’S _Magazin für die neue Historie und Geographie_. Halle, 1779, _seqq._
CAHIER ET MARTIN. _Mélanges d’Archéologie_. Paris, v. y.
CAPMANY, ANTONIO. _Memorias Historicas sobre la marina ... de Barcelona_. Madrid, 1779–1792.
CARP., CARPINI. As published in _Recueil de Voyages et de Mémoires de la Soc. de Géog._ Tom. iv. Paris, 1839.
CATHAY AND THE WAY THITHER. By Col. H. Yule. Hakluyt Society, 1866.
CHARDIN, _Voyages en Perse de_. Ed. of Langlès. Paris, 1811.
CHAVANNES, EDOUARD. _Mémoire composé à l’époque de la grande dynastie T’ang sur les Religieux éminents qui allèrent chercher la loi dans les Pays d’Occident par_ I-TSING. Paris, 1894, 8vo.
CHINA ILLUSTRATA. See _Kircher_.
CHINE ANCIENNE. By Pauthier, in _L’Univers Pittoresque_. Paris, 1837.
—— MODERNE. By do. and Bazin, in do. Paris, 1853.
CHIN. REP. _Chinese Repository_. Canton, 1832, _seqq._
CLAVIJO. Transl. by C. R. Markham. Hak. Society, 1859.
CONSULAR REPORTS. (See this vol. p. 144.)
CONTI, _Travels of Nicolo_. In _India in the XVth Century_. Hak. Society, 1857.
CORDIER, HENRI. _Les Voyages en Asie au XIVᵉ Siècle du Bienheureux Frère Odoric de Pordenone_. Paris, 1891, 8vo.
———————— _L’Extrême-Orient dans l’Atlas catalan de Charles V., Roi de France_. Paris, 1895, 8vo.
CURZON, GEORGE N. _Persia and the Persian Question_. London, 1892, 2 vol. 8vo.
D’AVEZAC. See App. H., III., No. 36.
DAVIES’S REPORT. _Rep. on the Trade and Resources of the Countries on the N.W. Boundary of Br. India_ (By R. H. Davies, now (1874) Lieut.-Governor of the Panjáb).
DEGUIGNES. _Hist. Gén. des Huns, etc._ Paris, 1756.
—————— (the Younger). _Voyage à Peking, etc._ Paris, 1808.
DELLA DECIMA, etc. Lisbone e Lucca (really Florence) 1765–1766. The 3rd volume of this contains the Mercantile Handbook of _Pegolotti_ (_circa_ 1340), and the 4th volume that of _Uzzano_ (1440).
DELLA PENNA. _Breve Notizia del Regno del Thibet_. An extract from the _Journal Asiatique_, sér. II. tom. xiv. (pub. by Klaproth).
DELLA VALLE, P. _Viaggi_. Ed. Brighton, 1843.
DE MAILLA. _H. Générale de la Chine, etc._ Paris, 1783.
DEVÉRIA, G. _La Frontière Sino-Annamite_. Paris, 1886, 8vo.
—————— _Notes d’Épigraphie mongole-chinoise_. Paris, 1897, 8vo. From the _Jour. As._
—————— _Musulmans et Manichéens chinois_. Paris, 1898, 8vo. From the _Jour. As._
—————— _Stèle Si-Hia de Leang-tcheou_. Paris, 1898, 8vo. From the _Jour. As._
DICT. DE LA PERSE. _Dict. Géog. Hist. et Litt. de la Perse, etc._; par Barbier de Meynard. Paris, 1861.
D’OHSSON. _H. des Mongols_. La Haye et Amsterdam, 1834.
DOOLITTLE, Rev. J. _The Social Life of the Chinese_. Condensed Ed. London, 1868.
DOUET D’ARCQ. _Comptes de l’Argenterie des Rois de France au XVᵉ Siècle_. Paris, 1851.
DOZY AND ENGELMANN. _Glossaire des Mots Espagnols et Portugais dérivés de l’Arabe_. 2de. Ed. Leyde, 1869.
DUCHESNE, ANDRÉ. _Historiae Francorum Scriptores_. Lut. Par. 1636–1649.
EARLY TRAVELS in Palestine, ed. by T. Wright, Esq. Bohn, London, 1848.
EDRISI. _Trad. par_ Amédée Jaubert; in _Rec. de Voy. et de Mém._, tom. v. et vi. Paris, 1836–1840.
ÉLIE DE LAPRIMAUDAIE. _Études sur le Commerce au Moyen Age_. Paris, 1848.
ELLIOT. _The History of India as told by its own Historians_. Edited from the posthumous papers of Sir H. M. Elliot, by Prof. Dowson. 1867, _seqq._
ERDMANN, Dr. FRANZ v. _Temudschin der Unerschütterliche_. Leipzig, 1862.
ERMAN. _Travels in Siberia_. Transl. by W. D. Cooley. London, 1848.
ESCAYRAC DE LAUTURE. _Mémoires sur la Chine_. Paris, 1865.
ÉTUDE PRATIQUE, etc. See _Hedde_.
FARIA Y SOUZA. _History of the Discovery and Conquest of India by the Portuguese_. Transl. by Capt. J. Stevens. London, 1695.
FERRIER, J. P. _Caravan Journeys, etc._ London, 1856.
FORTUNE. _Two Visits to the Tea Countries of China_. London, 1853.
FRANCISQUE-MICHEL. _Recherches sur le Commerce, la fabrication, et l’usage des étoffes de Soie, etc._ Paris, 1852.
FRESCOB. _Viaggi in Terra Santa di_ L. Frescobaldi, etc. (1384). Firenze, 1862.
GARCIA DE ORTA. _Garzia dall’Horto, Dell’Istoria dei semplici ed altre cose che vengono portate dall’Indie Orientali, etc._ Trad. dal Portughese da Annib. Briganti. Venezia, 1589.
GARNIER, FRANCIS. _Voyage d’Exploration en Indo-Chine_. Paris, 1873.
GAUBIL. _H. de Gentchiscan et de toute la Dinastie des Mongous_. Paris, 1739.
GILDEM., GILDEMEISTER. _Scriptorum Arabum de Rebus Indicis, etc._ Bonn, 1838.
GILL, CAPT. WILLIAM. _The River of Golden Sand.... With an Introductory Essay by Col._ HENRY YULE.... London, 1880, 2 vol. 8vo.
GODINHO DE EREDIA. _Malaca l’Inde méridionale et le Cathay reproduit en facsimile et traduit par M._ LÉON JANSSEN. Bruxelles, 1882, 4to.
GOLD. HORDE. See _Hammer_.
GRENARD, F. _J.-L. Dutreuil de Rhins-Mission scientifique dans la Haute Asie_, 1890–1895. Paris, 1897–1898, 3 vol. 4to and Atlas.
GROENEVELDT, W. P. _Notes on the Archipelago and Malacca. Compiled from Chinese Sources_. [Batavia, 1877] 8vo.
Rep. by Dr. R. Rost in 1887.
—————————— _Supplementary Jottings to the Notes. T’oung Pao, VII._, May, 1896, pp. 113–134.
HAMILTON, A. _New Account of the East Indies_. London, 1744.
HAMMER-PURGSTALL. _Geschichte der Goldenen Horde_. Pesth, 1840.
—————————— _Geschichte der Ilchane_. Darmstadt, 1842.
HEDDE ET RONDOT. _Étude Pratique du Commerce d’Exportation de la Chine_, par I. Hedde. _Revue et complétée_ par N. Rondot. Paris, 1849.
HEYD, Prof. W. _Le Colonie Commerciali degli Italiani in Oriente nel Media Evo; Dissert. Rifatt. dall’Autore e recate in Italiano dal_ Prof. G. Müller. Venezia e Torino, 1866.
———————— _Histoire du Commerce du Levant au Moyen Age ... éd. française_ ... par Furcy Raynaud. Leipzig, 1885–6, 2 vol. 8vo.
HOSIE, ALEXANDER. _Three Years in Western China; a Narrative of three Journeys in Ssŭ-ch’uan, Kuei-chow, and Yún-nan_. London, 1890, 8vo.
H. T. or HIUEN TSANG. _Vie et Voyages_, viz. Hist. de la Vie de Hiouen Thsang et de ses Voyages dans l’Inde, &c. Paris, 1853.
—— or ————————. _Mémoires sur les Contrées Occidentales, &c._ Paris, 1857. See _Pèlerins Bouddhistes_.
HUC. _Recollections of a Journey through Tartary, &c._ Condensed. Transl. by Mrs. P. Sinnett. London, 1852.
I. B., IBN. BAT., IBN BATUTA. _Voyages d’Ibn Batoutah par Defrémery et Sanguinetti_. Paris, 1853–58, 4 vol. 8vo.
IBN KHORDÂDHBEH.... _Cum versione gallica edidit_.... M. J. de Goeje. Lug. Bat., 1889, 8vo.
ILCH., ILCHAN., HAMMER’S ILCH. See _Hammer_.
INDIA IN XVTH CENTURY. Hak. Soc. 1857.
IND. ANT., INDIAN ANTIQUARY, a Journal of Oriental Research. Bombay, 1872, _seqq._
J. A. S. B. _Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal_.
J. As. _Journal Asiatique_.
J. C. BR. R. A. S. _Journal of the China Branch of the R. Asiatic Society_, Shanghai.
J. IND. ARCH. _Journal of the Indian Archipelago_.
J. N. C. BR. R. A. S. _Journal of the North China Branch of the R. Asiatic Society_, Shanghai.
J. R. A. S. _Journal of the Royal As. Society_.
J. R. G. S. _Journal of the Royal Geographical Society_.
JOINVILLE. Edited by Francisque-Michel. Firmin-Didot: Paris, 1867.
KAEMPFER. See _Am. Exot._
KHANIKOFF, NOTICE. See App. H., III., No. 43.
—————— MÉMOIRE _sur la Partie Méridionale de l’Asie Centrale_, Paris, 1862.
KIRCHER, _Athanasius. China, Monumentis, &c., Illustrata_. Amstelod. 1667.
KLAP. MÉM. See App. H., III., No. 22.
KOEPPEN, _Die Religion des Buddha_, von Carl Friedrich. Berlin, 1857–59.
LA PORTE OUVERTE, &c., _ou la Vraye Representation de la Vie, des Moeurs, de la Religion, et du Service Divin des Bramines, &c._, par le Sieur Abraham Roger, trad. en François. Amsterdam, 1670.
LADAK, &c. By Major Alex. Cunningham. 1854.
LASSEN. _Indische Alterthumskunde_. First edition is cited throughout.
LECOMTE, Père L. _Nouveaux Mémoires sur la Chine_. Paris, 1701.
LEVCHINE, ALEXIS DE. _Desc. des Hordes et des Steppes des Kirghiz Kaïssaks; trad._ par F. de Pigny. Paris, 1840.
LINSCHOTEN. _Hist. de la Navigation de Jean Hugues de Linschot._ 3^{ième} ed. Amst., 1638.
MAGAILLANS. See App. H., III., No. 4.
MAKRIZI. See _Quat. Mak._
MAR. SAN., MARIN. SANUT., MARINO SANUDO. _Liber Secretorum Fidelium Crucis_, in _Bongarsii Gesta Dei per Francos_. Hanoviæ, 1611. Tom. ii.
MARTÈNE ET DURAND. _Thesaurus Novus Anecdotorum_. Paris, 1717.
MARTINI. See App. H., III., No. 2.
MAS’UDI. _Les Prairies d’Or, par Barbier de Meynard et Pavet de Courteille_. Paris, 1861, _seqq._
MATTHIOLI, P. A. _Commentarii in libros VI. Pedacii Dioscoridis de Medicâ Materiâ_. Venetiis, 1554; sometimes other editions are cited.
MAUNDEVILE. Halliwell’s Ed. London, 1866.
MÉM. DE L’ACAD. See _Acad._
MENDOZA. _H. of China_. Ed. of Hak. Society, 1853–54.
MERVEILLES DE L’INDE. _Livre des Merveilles de l’Inde.... Texte arabe par_ P. A. Van der Lith. _Trad. française par_ L. Marcel Devic. Leide, 1883–1886, 4to.
MICHEL. See _Francisque-Michel_.
MID. KINGD. See _Williams_.
MOORCROFT _and Trebeck’s Travels_; edited by Prof. H. H. Wilson, 1841.
MOSHEIM. _Historia Tartarorum Ecclesiastica_. Helmstadt, 1741.
MUNTANER, in _Buchon_, q.v.
N. & E., NOT. ET EXT. _Notices et Extraits des MSS. de la Bibliothèque du Roy_. Paris, v. y.
N. & Q. _Notes and Queries_.
N. & Q. C. & J. _Notes and Queries for China and Japan_.
NELSON, J. H. _The Madura Country, a Manual_. Madras, 1868.
NEUMANN, C. F. His Notes at end of Bürck’s German ed. of Polo.
NOVUS ORBIS _Regionum &c. Veteribus incognitarum_. Basil. Ed. 1555.
P. DE LA CROIX, PÉTIS DE LA CROIX, _Hist. de Timurbec, &c._ Paris, 1722.
P. DELLA V. See _Della Valle_.
P. VINC. MARIA, P. VINCENZO. _Viaggio all’Indie Orientali del P. F. V. M. di S. Catarina da Siena_. Roma, 1672.
PALLAS. _Voyages dans plusieurs Provinces de l’Empire de Russie, &c._ Paris, l’an XI.
PAOLINO. _Viaggio alle Indie, &c._ da Fra P. da S. Bartolomeo. Roma, 1796.
PEGOLOTTI. See _Della Decima_.
PÈLERINS BOUDDHISTES, par Stan. Julien. This name covers the two works entered above under the heading H. T., the _Vie et Voyages_ forming vol. i., and the _Mémoires_, vols. ii. and iii.
PEREG. QUAT. _Peregrinatores Medii Aevi Quatuor, &c._ Recens. J. M. Laurent. Lipsiæ, 1864.
POST UND REISE ROUTEN. See _Sprenger_.
PRAIRIES D’OR. See _Mas’udi_.
PUNJAUB TRADE REPORT. See _Davies_.
Q. R., QUAT. RASHID. _H. des Mongols de la Perse, par Raschid-ed-din, trad. &c._ par M. Quatremère. Paris, 1836.
QUAT. MAK., QUATREMÈRE’S MAK. _H. des Sultans Mamlouks de l’Égypte, par Makrizi. Trad. par Q._ Paris, 1837, _seqq._
RAS MALA, _or Hindoo Annals of Goozerat_. By A. K. Forbes. London, 1856.
REINAUD, REL. _Relations des Voyages faits par les Arabes dans l’Inde et la Chine, &c._ Paris, 1845.
————, INDE, _Mém. Géog. Histor. et Scientifique sur l’, &c._ Paris, 1849.
RELAT., RELATIONS. See last but one.
RICHTHOFEN, Baron F. VON. _Letters_ (addressed to the Committee of the Shanghai Chamber of Commerce) _on the Interior Provinces of China_. Shanghai, 1870–72.
ROCKHILL, W. W. _The Land of the Lamas_. London, 1891, 8vo.
———————— _Diary of a Journey through Mongolia and Tibet in 1891 and 1892_. Washington, 1894, 8vo.
———————— _The Journey of William of Rubruck_. London, _Hakluyt Society_, 1900, 8vo.
ROMAN., ROMANIN, _Storia Documentata di Venezia_. Venezia, 1853, _seqq._
RUB., RUBRUQUIS. Cited from edition in _Recueil de Voyages et de Mémoires_, tom. iv. Paris, 1839. See ROCKHILL.
S. S., SAN. SETZ., SS. SSETZ. See _Schmidt_.
SANTAREM, _Essai sur l’Hist. de la Cosmographie, &c._ Paris, 1849.
SANUDO. See _Mar. San._
SCHILTBERGER, _Reisen des_ Johan. Ed. by Neumann. München, 1859.
SCHLEGEL, G. _Geographical Notes_, I.–XVI., _in T’oung Pao_, Leiden, 1898–1901.
SCHMIDT. _Geschichte der Ost-Mongolen, &c., verfasst von Ssanang-Ssetzen Chungtaidschi_. St. Petersburg, 1829.
SONNERAT. _Voyage aux Indes Orientales_. Paris, 1782.
SPRENGER. _Post und Reise Routen des Orients_. Leipzig, 1864.
ST. MARTIN, M. J. _Mémoires Historiques et Géographiques sur l’Arménie, &c._ Paris, 1818–19.
SYKES, MAJOR PERCY MOLESWORTH. _Ten Thousand Miles in Persia, or Eight Years in Irán_. London, 1902, 8vo.
Chap. xxiii. _Marco Polo’s Travels in Persia_.
——————— _Recent Journeys in Persia_. (_Geog. Journal_, X, 1897, pp. 568–597.)
TEIXEIRA, _Relaciones de_ Pedro, _del Origen Descendencia y Succession de los Reyes de Persia, y de Harmuz, y de un Viage hecho por el mismo aotor, &c._ En Amberes, 1670.
TIMKOWSKI. _Travels, &c._, edited by Klaproth. London, 1827.
UZZANO. See _Della Decima_.
VARTHEMA’S _Travels_. By Jones and Badger. Hak. Soc., 1863.
VIGNE, G. T. _Travels in Kashmir, &c._ London, 1842.
VIN. BELL., VINC. BELLOV. Vincent of Beauvais’ _Speculum Historiale, Speculum Naturale, &c._
VISDELOU. Supplément to D’Herbelot. 1780.
WILLIAMS’S _Middle Kingdom_. 3rd. Ed. New York and London, 1857.
WILLIAMSON, Rev. A. _Journeys in N. China, &c._ London, 1870.
WEBER’S _Metrical Romances of the XIIIth, XIVth, and XVth Centuries_. Edinburgh, 1810.
WITSEN. _Noord en Oost Tartaryen_. 2nd Ed. Amsterdam, 1785.
APPENDIX K.—_Values of certain Moneys, Weights, and Measures, occurring in this Book_.
FRENCH MONEY.
The +Livre Tournois+ of the period may be taken, on the mean of five valuations cited in a footnote at p. 87 of vol. i., as equal in _modern silver value_ to ... 18·04 _francs._
Say English money ... 14_s._ 3·8_d._
The +Livre Parisis+ was worth one-fourth more than the _Tournois_,[1] and therefore equivalent in silver value to ... 22·55 _francs._
Say English money ... 17_s._ 10·8_d._
(Gold being then to silver in relative value about 12:1 instead of about 15:1 as now, one-fourth has to be added to the values based on silver in equations with the gold coin of the period, and one-fifth to be deducted in values based on gold value. By oversight, in vol. i. p. 87, I took 16:1 as the present gold value, and so exaggerated the value of the livre Tournois as compared with gold.)
M. Natalis de Wailly, in his recent fine edition of Joinville, determines the valuation of these _livres_, in the reign of St. Lewis, by taking a mean between a value calculated on the present value of silver, and a value calculated on the present value of gold,[2] and his result is:
+Livre Tournois+ = ... 20·26 _francs._ +Livre Parisis+ = ... 25·33 „
Though there is something arbitrary in this mode of valuation, it is, perhaps, on the whole the best; and its result is extremely handy for the memory (as somebody has pointed out) for we thus have
One +Livre Tournois+ = One Napoleon. „ „ +Parisis+ = One Sovereign.
VENETIAN MONEY.
The +Mark+ of Silver all over Europe may be taken fairly at 2_l._ 4_s._ of our money in modern value; the Venetian mark being a fraction more, and the marks of England, Germany and France fractions less.[3]
The Venice +Gold Ducat+ or +Zecchin+, first coined in accordance with a Law of 31st October 1283, was, _in our gold value_, worth ... 11·82 _francs._[4] or English ... 9_s._ 4·284_d._
The Zecchin when first coined was fixed as equivalent to 18 _grossi_, and on this calculation the +Grosso+ should be a little less than 5_d._ sterling.[5] But from what follows it looks as if there must have been another _grosso_, perhaps only of account, which was only ¾ of the former, therefore equivalent to 3¾_d._ only. This would be a clue to difficulties which I do not find dealt with by anybody in a precise or thorough manner; but I can find no evidence for it.
Accounts were kept at Venice not in ducats and grossi, but in _Lire_, of which there were several denominations, _viz._:
1. +Lira dei Grossi+, called in Latin Documents _Libra denariorum Venetorum grosorum_.[6] Like every _Lira_ or Pound, this consisted of 20 _soldi_, and each _soldo_ of 12 _denari_ or _deniers_.[7] In this case the Lira was equivalent to 10 golden ducats; and its Denier, as the name implies, was the _Grosso_. The Grosso therefore here was ¹⁄₂₄₀ of 10 ducats or ¹⁄₂₄ of a ducat, instead of ¹⁄₁₈.
2. +Lira ai Grossi+ (_L. den. Ven. ad grossos_). This by decree of 2nd June, 1285, went two to the ducat. In fact it is the _soldo_ of the preceding _Lira_, and as such the _Grosso_ was, as we have just seen, its denier; which is perhaps the reason of the name.
3. +Lira dei Piccoli+ (_L. den. Ven. parvulorum_). The ducat is alleged to have been at first equal to three of these _Lire_ (_Romanin_, I. 321); but the calculations of Marino Sanudo (1300–1320) in the _Secreta Fidelium Crucis_ show that he reckons the Ducat equivalent to 3·2 _lire_ of _piccoli_.[8]
In estimating these _Lire_ in modern English money, on the basis of their relation to the ducat, we must reduce the apparent value by ⅕. We then have:
1. +Lira dei Grossi+ equivalent to nearly 3_l._ 15_s._ 0_d._ (therefore exceeding by nearly 10_s._ the value of the Pound sterling of the period, or _Lira di Sterlini_, as it was called in the appropriate Italian phrase).[9]
2. +Lira ai Grossi+ ... 3_s._ 9_d._
3. +Lira dei Piccoli+ ... 2_s._ 4_d._
The +Tornese+ or +Tornesel+ at Venice was, according to Romanin (III. 343) = 4 Venice deniers: and if these are the _deniers_ of the _Lira ai Grossi_, the coin would be worth a little less than ¾_d._, and nearly the equivalent of the denier Tournois, from which it took its name.[10]
* * * * *
The term +Bezant+ is used by Polo always (I believe) as it is by Joinville, by Marino Sanudo, and by Pegolotti, for the Egyptian gold dínár, the intrinsic value of which varied somewhat, but can scarcely be taken at less than 10_s._ 6_d._ or 11_s._ (See _Cathay_, pp. 440–441; and see also _J. As._ sér. VI. tom. xi. pp. 506–507.) The exchange of Venice money for the Bezant or Dinar in the Levant varied a good deal (as is shown by examples in the passage in _Cathay_ just cited), but is always in these examples a large fraction (⅙ up to ⅓) more than the Zecchin. Hence, when Joinville gives the equation of St. Lewis’s ransom as 1,000,000 _bezants_ or 500,000 _livres_, I should have supposed these to be _livres Parisis_ rather than _Tournois_, as M. de Wailly prefers.
There were a variety of coins of lower value in the Levant called Bezants,[11] but these do not occur in our Book.
* * * * *
The Venice +Saggio+, a weight for precious substances was ⅙ of an ounce, corresponding to the weight of the Roman gold _solidus_, from which was originally derived the Arab +Misḳál+. And Polo appears to use _saggio_ habitually as the equivalent of _Misḳál_. His +pois+ or +peso+, applied to gold and silver, seems to have the same sense, and is indeed a literal translation of _Misḳál_. (See vol. ii. p. 41.)
* * * * *
For measures Polo uses the _palm_ rather than the foot. I do not find a value of the Venice palm, but over Italy that measure varies from 9½ inches to something over 10. The Genoa Palm is stated at 9·725 inches.
_Jal_ (_Archéologie Nav._ I. 271) cites the following Table of
_Old Venice Measures of Length_.
4 fingers = 1 handbreadth. 4 handbreadths = 1 foot. 5 feet = 1 pace. 1000 paces = 1 mile. 4 miles = 1 league.
[1] See (_Dupré de St. Maur_) _Essai sur les Monnoies, &c._ Paris, 1746, p. xv; and _Douet d’Arcq_, pp. 5, 15, &c.
[2] He takes the _silver value_ of the gros Tournois (the _sol_ of the system) at 0·8924 _fr._, whence the Livre = 17·849 _fr._ And the _gold value_ of the golden _Agnel_, which passed for 12½ _sols Tournois_, is 14·1743 _fr._ Whence the Livre = 22·6789 _fr._ Mean = 20·2639 _fr._
[3] The Mark was ⅔ of a pound. The English +Pound Sterling+ of the period was in silver value = 3_l._ 5_s._ 2_d._ Hence the +Mark+ = 2_l._ 3_s._ 5·44_d._ The Cologne Mark, according to Pegolotti, was the same, and the Venice Mark of silver was = 1 English Tower Mark + 3½ sterlings (_i.e._ pence of the period), = therefore to 2_l._ 4_s._ 4·84_d._ The French Mark of Silver, according to Dupré de St. Maur, was about 3 Livres, presumably Tournois, and therefore 2_l._ 2_s._ 11½_d._
[4] _Cibrario, Pol. Ec. del Med. Evo._ III. 228. The +Gold Florin+ of Florence was worth a fraction more = 9_s._ 4·85_d._
Sign. Desimoni, of Genoa, obligingly points out that the changed relation of Gold ducat and silver _grosso_ was due to a general rise in price of gold between 1284 and 1302, shown by notices of other Italian mints which raise the equation of the gold florin in the same ratio, viz. from 9 _sols tournois_ to 12.
[5] For ¹⁄₁₈ of the florin will be 6·23_d._, and deducting ⅕, as pointed out above, we have 4·99_d._ as the value of the _grosso_.
I have a note that the _grosso_ contained 42⁶⁸⁄₁₄₄ Venice grains of pure silver. If the Venice grain be the same as the old Milan grain (·051 _grammes_) this will give exactly the same value of 5_d._
[6] Also called, according to Romanin, _Lira d’imprestidi_. See Introd. Essay in vol. i. p. _66_.
[7] It is not too universally known to be worth noting that our £. s. d. represents _Livres, sois, deniers_.
[8] He also states the grosso to have been worth 32 _piccoli_, which is consistent with this and the two preceding statements. For at 3·2 _lire_ to the ducat the latter would = 768 piccoli, and ¹⁄₂₄ of this = 32 piccoli. Pegolotti also assigns 24 grossi to the ducat (p. 151).
The tendency of these _Lire_, as of pounds generally, was to degenerate in value. In Uzzano (1440) we find the Ducat equivalent to 100 _soldi_, _i.e._ to 5 _lire_.
Everybody seems to be tickled at the notion that the Scotch Pound or Livre was only 20 Pence. Nobody finds it funny that the French or Italian Pound is only 20 halfpence, or less!
[9] _Uzzano_ in _Della Decima_, IV. 124.
[10] According to Gallicciolli (II. 53) _piccoli_ (probably in the vague sense of small copper coin) were called in the Levant τορνέσια.
[11] Thus in the document containing the autograph of King Hayton, presented at p. _13_ of Introductory Essay, the King gives with his daughter, “Damoiselle Femie,” a dowry of 25,000 _besans sarrazinas_, and in payment 4 of his own bezants _staurats_ (presumably so called from bearing a _cross_) are to count as one Saracen Bezant. (_Cod. Diplomat. del S. Mil. Ord. Gerosolim_. I. 134.)
APPENDIX L.—_Sundry Supplementary Notes on Special Subjects_.—(H. C.)
1.—_The Polos at Acre_. 8.—_La Couvade_. 2.—_Sorcery in Kashmir_. 9.—_Alacan_. 3.—PAONANO PAO. 10.—_Champa_. 4.—_Pamir_. 11.—_Ruck Quills_. 5.—_Number of Pamirs_. 12.—_A Spanish Edition of Marco Polo_. 6.—_Site of Pein_. 13.—_Sir John Mandeville_. 7.—_Fire-arms_.
1.—THE POLOS AT ACRE. (Vol. i. p. _19. Int._)
M. le Comte Riant (_Itin. à Jérusalem_, p. xxix.) from various data thinks the two sojourns of the Polos at Acre must have been between the 9th May, 1271, date of the arrival of Edward of England and of Tedaldo Visconti, and the 18th November, 1271, time of the departure of Tedaldo. Tedaldo was still in Paris on the 28th December, 1269, and he appears to have left for the Holy Land after the departure of S. Lewis for Tunis (2nd July, 1270).—H. C.
2.—SORCERY IN KASHMIR. (Vol. i. p. 166.)
In _Kalhaṇa’s Rājataraṅgiṇī, A Chronicle of the Kings of Kásmīr translated by M. A. Stein_, we read (Bk. IV. 94, p. 128): “Again the Brahman’s wife addressed him: ‘O king, as he is famous for his knowledge of charms (_Khārkhodavidyā_), he can get over an ordeal with ease.’” Dr. Stein adds the following note: “The practice of witchcraft and the belief in its efficiency have prevailed in Kásmir from early times, and have survived to some extent to the present day; comp. _Bühler, Report_, p. 24.... The term _Khārkhoda_, in the sense of a kind of deadly charm or witchcraft, recurs in v. 239, and is found also in the _Vijayésvaramāh_ (Adipur.), xi. 25. In the form _Khārkoṭa_ it is quoted by the _N. P. W._ from _Caraka_, vi. 23. _Khārkhoṭa_ appears as the designation of a sorcerer or another kind of uncanny persons in _Haracar_., ii. 125, along with Kṛtyās and Vetālas....”
3.—PAONANO PAO. (Vol. i. p. 173.)
In his paper on _Zoroastrian Deities on Indo-Scythians’ Coins_ (_Babylonian and Oriental Record_, August, 1887, pp. 155–166; rep. in the _Indian Antiquary_, 1888), Dr. M. A. Stein has demonstrated that the legend PAONANO PAO on the coins of the Yue-Chi or Indo-Scythian Kings (Kanishka, Huvishka, Vasudeva), is the exact transcription of the old Iranian title _Shāhanān Shāh_ (Persian _Shāhan-shāh_), “King of Kings”; the letter P, formerly read as P(_r_), has since been generally recognised, in accordance with his interpretation as a distinct character expressing the sound _sh_.
4.—PAMIR. (Vol. i. pp. 174–175.)
I was very pleased to find that my itinerary agrees with that of Dr. M. A. Stein; this learned traveller sends me the following remarks: “The remark about the absence of birds (pp. 174–175) _might_ be a reflex of the very ancient legend (based probably on the name zend _Upairi-saena_, pehlevi _Apārsīn_, ‘higher than the birds’) which represents the _Híndu Kush_ range proper as too high for birds to fly over. The legend can be traced by successive evidence in the case of the range north of Kabul.”—Regarding the route (p. 175) from the _Wakhjir_ (sic) Pass down the Taghdum-bash Pamir, then _viâ_ Tāsh-kurghan, Little Karakul, Bulun Kul, Gez Daria to Tashmalik and Kashgar, Dr. Stein says that he surveyed it in July, 1900, and he refers for the correct phonetic spelling of local names along it to his map to be published in _J. R. G. S._, in December, 1902. He says in his _Prel. Report_, p. 10: “The _Wakhjīr_ Pass, only some 12 miles to the south-west of _Kök-török_, connects the Tāghdumbāsh Pamir and the Sarīkol Valleys with the head-waters of the Oxus. So I was glad that the short halt, which was unavoidable for survey purposes, permitted me to move a light camp close to the summit of the Wakhjīr Pass (circ. 16,200 feet). On the following day, 2nd July, I visited the head of _Ab-i-Panja_ Valley, near the great glaciers which Lord Curzon first demonstrated to be the true source of the River Oxus. It was a strange sensation for me in this desolate mountain waste to know that I had reached at last the eastern threshold of that distant region, including Bactria and the Upper Oxus Valley, which as a field of exploration had attracted me long before I set foot in India. Notwithstanding its great elevation, the Wakhjīr Pass and its approaches both from west and east are comparatively easy. Comparing the topographical facts with Hiuen-Tsiang’s account in the _Si yu-ki_, I am led to conclude that the route followed by the great Chinese Pilgrim, when travelling about A.D. 649 from Badakshān towards Khotan, through ‘the valley of Po-mi-lo (Pamir)’ into Sarīkol, actually traversed this Pass.”
Dr. Stein adds in his notes to me that “Marco Polo’s description of the forty days’ journey to the E.N.E. of _Vokhan_ as _through tracts of wilderness_ can well be appreciated by any one who has passed through the Pamir Region, in the direction of the valleys W. and N. of Muztagh Ata. After leaving Táshkurghan and Tagharma, where there is some precarious cultivation, there is no local produce to be obtained until the oasis of Tashmalik is reached in the open Kashgar plains. In the narrow valley of the Yamanyar River (Gez Defile) there is scarcely any grazing; its appearance is far more desolate than that of the elevated Pamirs.”—“Marco Polo’s praise (p. 181) of the gardens and vine-yards of Kashgar is well deserved; also the remark about the trading enterprise of its merchants still holds good, if judged by the standard of Chinese Turkestan. Kashgar traders visit Khotan far more frequently than _vice versa_. It is strange that no certain remains of Nestorian worship can be traced now.”—“My impression [Dr. Stein’s] of the people of the Khotan oasis (p. 188) was that they are certainly a meeker and more docile race than _e.g._ the average ‘Kashgarlik’ or Yarkandi. The very small number of the Chinese garrison of the districts Khotan and Keria (only about 200 men) bears out this impression.”
We may refer for the ancient sites, history, etc., of Khotan to the _Preliminary Report_ of Dr. Stein and to his paper in the _Geographical Journal_ for December, 1902, actually in the press.
5.—NUMBER OF PAMIRS. (Vol. i. p. 176.)
Lord Curzon gives the following list of the “eight claimants to the distinction and title of a Pamir”: (1) Taghdumbash, or Supreme Head of the Mountains Pamir, lying immediately below and to the north of the Kilik Pass. (2) The Pamir-i-Wakhan. (3) The Pamir-i-Khurd, or Little Pamir. (4) The Pamir-i-Kalan, or Great Pamir. (5) The Alichur Pamir. (6) The Sarez Pamir. (7) The Rang Kul Pamir. (8) The Khargosh or Hare Pamir, which contains the basin of the Great Kara Kul. See this most valuable paper, _The Pamirs and the Source of the Oxus_, reprinted from the _Geographical Journal_ of 1896, in 1896, 1898, and 1899.
6.—PEIN. (Vol. i. p. 192.)
Dr. M. A. Stein, of the Indian Educational Service, appears to have exactly identified the site of Pein, during his recent archæological researches in Central Asia; he writes (_Prel. Report on a Journey of Archæological and Topog. Exploration in Chinese Turkestan_, Lond., 1901, pp. 58–59): “Various antiquarian and topographical considerations made me anxious to identify the position of the town of _Pi-mo_, which Hiuen-Tsiang describes as some 300 _li_ to the east of the Khotan capital. It was probably the same place as the _Pein_, visited by Marco Polo. After marching back along the Keriya River for four days, I struck to the south-west, and, after three more marches, arrived in the vicinity of Lachin-Ata Mazar, a desolate little shrine in the desert to the north of the Khotan-Keriya route. Though our search was rendered difficult by the insufficiency of guides and the want of water, I succeeded during the following few days in tracing the extensive ruined site which previous information had led me to look for in that vicinity. ‘Uzun-Tati’ (‘the distant Tati,’) as the _débris_-covered area is locally designated, corresponds in its position and the character of its remains exactly to the description of Pi-mo. Owing to far-advanced erosion and the destruction dealt by treasure-seekers, the structural remains are very scanty indeed. But the _débris_, including bits of glass, pottery, china, small objects in brass and stone, etc., is plentiful enough, and in conjunction with the late Chinese coins found here, leaves no doubt as to the site having been occupied up to the Middle Ages.”
Our itinerary should therefore run from Khotan to Uzun Tati, and thence to Nia, leaving Kiria to the south; indeed Kiria is _not_ an ancient place.—H. C.
Mr. E. J. Rapson, of the British Museum, with the kind permission of Dr. Stein, has sent me a photograph (which we reproduce) of coins and miscellaneous objects found at Uzun Tati. Coin (1) bears the _nien-hao_ (title of reign) _Pao Yuen_ (1038–1040) of the Emperor Jen Tsung, of the Sung Dynasty; Coin (2) bears the _nien-hao_, _K’ien Yuen_ (758–760) of the Emperor Su Tsung of the T’ang Dynasty; Coin (3) is of the time of the Khan of Turkestan, Muhammad Arslān Khan, about 441 A.H. = 1049 A.D. From the description sent to me by Mr. Rapson and written by Mr. Andrews, I note that the miscellaneous objects include: “Two fragments of fine Chinese porcelain, highly glazed and painted with Chinese ornament in blue. That on the left is painted on both sides, and appears to be portion of rim of a bowl. Thickness ³⁄₃₂ of an inch. That to the right is slightly coarser, and is probably portion of a larger vessel. Thickness ¼ inch (nearly). A third fragment of porcelain, shown at bottom of photo, is decorated roughly in a neutral brown colour, which has imperfectly ‘fluxed.’ It, also, appears to be Chinese. Thickness ⅛ inch (nearly).—A brass or bronze object, cast. Probably portion of a clasp or buckle.—A brass finger ring containing a piece of mottled green glass held loosely in place by a turned-over denticulated rim. The metal is very thin.”—H. C.
7.—FIRE-ARMS. (Vol. i. p. 342.)
From a paper on _Siam’s Intercourse with China_, published by Lieutenant-Colonel Gerini in the _Asiatic Quarterly Review_ for October, 1902, it would appear that fire-arms were mentioned for the first time in Siamese Records during the Lāu invasion and the siege of Swankhalôk (from 1085 to 1097 A.D.); it is too early a date for the introduction of fire-arms, though it would look “much more like an anachronism were the advent of these implements of warfare [were] placed, in blind reliance upon the _Northern Chronicles_, still a few centuries back. The most curious of it all is, however, the statement as to the weapons in question having been introduced into the country from China.” Following W. F. Mayers in his valuable contributions to the _Jour. North-China B. R. A. S._, 1869–1870, Colonel Gerini, who, of course, did not know of Dr. Schlegel’s paper, adds: “It was not until the reign of the Emperor Yung Lê, and on occasion of the invasion of Tonkin in A.D. 1407, that the Chinese acquired the knowledge of the propulsive effect of gunpowder, from their vanquished enemies.”
8.—LA COUVADE. (Vol. ii. p. 91.)
Mr. H. Ling Roth has given an interesting paper entitled _On the Signification of Couvade_, in the _Journ. Anthropological Institute_, XXII. 1893, pp. 204–243. He writes (pp. 221–222):—“From this survey it would seem in the first place that we want a great deal more information about the custom in the widely isolated cases where it has been reported, and secondly, that the authenticity of some of the reported cases is doubtful in consequence of authors repeating their predecessors’ tales, as Colquhoun did Marco Polo’s, and V. der Haart did Schouten’s. I should not be at all surprised if ultimately both Polo’s and Schouten’s accounts turned out to be myths, both these travellers making their records at a time when the Old World was full of the tales of the New, so that in the end, we may yet find the custom is not, nor ever has been, so widespread as is generally supposed to have been the case.”
I do not very well see how Polo, in the 13th and 14th centuries could make his _record at a time when the Old World was full of the tales of the New_, discovered at the end of the 15th century! Unless Mr. Ling Roth supposes the Venetian Traveller acquainted with the various theories of the Pre-Columbian discovery of America!!
9.—ALACAN. (Vol. ii. pp. 255 and 261.)
Dr. G. Schlegel writes, in the _T’oung Pao_ (May, 1898, p. 153): “_Abakan_ or _Abachan_ ought to be written _Alahan_. His name is written by the Chinese _Ats’zehan_ and by the Japanese _Asikan_; but this is because they have both confounded the character _lah_ with the character _ts’ze_; the old sound of [the last] character [of the name] was _kan_ and is always used by the Chinese when wanting to transcribe the title _Khan_ or _Chan_. Marco Polo’s A_b_acan is a clerical error for A_l_acan.”
10.—CHAMPA. (Vol. ii. p. 268.)
In Ma Huan’s account of the Kingdom of Siam, transl. by Mr. Phillips (_Jour. China B. R. A. S._, XXI. 1886, pp. 35–36) we read: “Their marriage ceremonies are as follows:—They first invite the priest to conduct the bridegroom to the bride’s house, and on arrival there the priest exacts the ‘droit seigneurial,’ and then she is introduced to the bridegroom.”
11.—RUCK QUILLS. (Vol. ii. p. 421.)
Regarding Ruck Quills, Sir H. Yule wrote in the _Academy_, 22nd March, 1884, pp. 204–405:—
“I suggested that this might possibly have been some vegetable production, such as a great frond of the Ravenala (_Urania speciosa_) cooked to pass as a ruc’s quill. (_Marco Polo_, first edition, ii. 354; second edition, ii. 414.) Mr. Sibree, in his excellent book on Madagascar (_The Great African Island_, 1880) noticed this, but said:
“‘It is much more likely that they [the ruc’s quills] were the immensely long midribs of the leaves of the rofia palm. These are from twenty to thirty feet long, and are not at all unlike an enormous quill stripped of the feathering portion’” (p. 55).
In another passage he describes the palm, _Sagus ruffia_ (_? raphia_):
“The _rofia_ has a trunk of from thirty to fifty feet in height, and at the head divides into seven or eight immensely long leaves. The midrib of these leaves is a very strong, but extremely light and straight pole.... These poles are often twenty feet or more in length, and the leaves proper consist of a great number of fine and long pinnate leaflets, set at right angles to the midrib, from eighteen to twenty inches long, and about one and a half broad,” etc. (pp. 74, 75).
When Sir John Kirk came home in 1881–1882, I spoke to him on the subject, and he felt confident that the _rofia_ or _raphia_ palm-fronds were the original of the ruc’s quills. He also kindly volunteered to send me a specimen on his return to Zanzibar. This he did not forget, and some time ago there arrived at the India Office not one, but four of these ruc’s quills. In the letter which announced this despatch Sir John says:—
“I send to-day per s.s. _Arcot_ ... four fronds of the Raphia palm, called here ‘Moale.’ They are just as sold and shipped up and down the coast. No doubt they were sent in Marco Polo’s time in exactly the same state, _i.e._ stripped of their leaflets, and with the tip broken off. They are used for making stages and ladders, and last long if kept dry. They are also made into doors, by being cut into lengths, and pinned through. The stages are made of three, like tripods, and used for picking cloves from the higher branches.”
The largest of the four midribs sent (they do not differ much) is 25 feet 4 inches long, measuring 12 inches in girth at the butt, and 5 inches at the upper end. I calculate that if it originally came to a point the whole length would be 45 feet, but, as this would not be so, we may estimate it at 35 to 40 feet. The thick part is deeply hollowed on the upper (?) side, leaving the section of the solid butt in form a thick crescent. The leaflets are all gone, but when entire, the object must have strongly resembled a Brobdingnagian feather. Compare this description with that of Padre Bolivar in Ludolf, referred to above.
“In aliquibus ... regionibus vidi pennas alae istius avis prodigiosae, licet avem non viderim, Penna illa, prout ex formâ colligebatur, erat ex mediocribus, longitudine 28 palmorum, latitudine trium. Calamus vero a radice usque ad extremitatem longitudine quinque palmorum, densitatis instar brachii moderati, robustissimus erat et durus. Pennulae inter se aequales et bene compositae, ut vix ab invicem nisi cum violentiâ divellerentur. Colore erant valdê nigro, calamus colore albo.” (_Ludolfi, ad suam Hist. Aethiop., Comment._, p. 164.)
The last particular, as to colour, I am not able to explain: the others correspond well. The _palmus_ in this passage may be anything from 9 to 10 inches.
I see this tree is mentioned by Captain R. F. Burton in his volume on the Lake Regions (vol. xxix. of the _Journal_ of the Royal Geographical Society, p. 34),[1] and probably by many other travellers.
I ought to mention here that some other object has been shown at Zanzibar as part of the wings of a great bird. Sir John Kirk writes that this (which he does not describe particularly) was in the possession of the Roman Catholic priests at Bagamoyo, to whom it had been given by natives of the interior, who declared that they had brought it from Tanganyika, and that it was part of the wing of a gigantic bird. On another occasion they repeated this statement, alleging that this bird was known in the Udoe (?) country near the coast. These priests were able to communicate directly with their informants, and certainly believed the story. Dr. Hildebrand, also, a competent German naturalist, believed in it. But Sir John Kirk himself says that “what the priests had to show was most undoubtedly the whalebone of a comparatively small whale.”
12.—A SPANISH EDITION OF MARCO POLO.
As we go to press we receive the newly published volume, _El Libro de Marco Polo—Aus dem vermächtnis des_ Dr. Hermann Knust _nach der Madrider Handschrift herausgegeben von_ Dr. R. Stuebe. Leipzig, Dr. Seele & Co., 1902, 8vo., pp. xxvi.–114. It reproduces the old Spanish text of the manuscript Z-I-2 of the Escurial Library from a copy made by Señor D. José Rodriguez for the Society of the Spanish Bibliophiles, which, being unused, was sold by him to Dr. Hermann Knust, who made a careful comparison of it with the original manuscript. This copy, found among the papers of Dr. Knust after his death, is now edited by Dr. Stuebe. The original 14th century MS., written in a good hand on two columns, includes 312 leaves of parchment, and contains several works; among them we note: 1°, a Collection entitled _Flor de las Ystorias de Oriente_ (fol. 1–104), made on the advice of Juan Fernandez de Heredia, Grand Master of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (1377), of which _Marco Polo_ (fol. 50–104) is a part; 2° and _Secretum Secretorum_ (fol. 254 _r_-fol. 312 _v._); this MS. is not mentioned in our List, _App. F._, II. p. 546, unless it be our No. 60.
The manuscript includes 68 chapters, the first of which is devoted to the City of Lob and Sha-chau, corresponding to our Bk. I., ch. 39 and 40 (our vol. i. pp. 196 _seqq._); ch. 65 (p. 111) corresponds approximatively to our ch. 40, Bk. III. (vol. ii. p. 451); chs. 66, 67, and the last, 68, would answer to our chs. 2, 3, and 4 of Bk. I. (vol i., pp. 45 _seqq._). A concordance of this Spanish text, with Pauthier’s, Yule’s, and the Geographic Texts, is carefully given at the beginning of each of the 68 chapters of the Book.
Of course this edition does not throw any new light on the text, and this volume is but a matter of curiosity.
13.—SIR JOHN MANDEVILLE.
One of the last questions in which Sir Henry Yule[2] took an interest in, was the problem of the authorship of the book of Travels which bears the name of SIR JOHN MANDEVILLE, the worthy Knight, who, after being for a long time considered as the “Father of English Prose” has become simply “the name claimed by the compiler of a singular book of Travels, written in French, and published between 1357 and 1371.”[3]
It was understood that “JOHAN MAUNDEUILLE, chiualer, ia soit ceo qe ieo ne soie dignes, neez et norriz Dengleterre de la ville Seint Alban,” crossed the sea “lan millesme cccᵐᵉ vintisme et secund, le iour de Seint Michel,”[4] that he travelled since across the whole of Asia during the 14th century, that he wrote the relation of his travels as a rest after his fatiguing peregrinations, and that he died on the 17th of November, 1372, at Liège, when he was buried in the Church of the Guillemins.
No work has enjoyed a greater popularity than Mandeville’s; while we describe but eighty-five manuscripts of Marco Polo’s, and I gave a list of seventy-three manuscripts of Friar Odoric’s relation,[5] it is by hundreds that Mandeville’s manuscripts can be reckoned. As to the printed editions, they are, so to speak, numberless; Mr. Carl Schönborn[6] gave in 1840, an incomplete bibliography; Tobler in his _Bibliographia geographica Palestinae_ (1867),[7] and Röhricht[8] after him compiled a better bibliography, to which may be added my own lists in the _Bibliotheca Sinica_[9] and in the _T’oung-Pao_.[10]
Campbell, _Ann. de la Typog. néerlandaise_, 1874, p. 338, mentions a Dutch edition: _Reysen int heilighe lant_, s.l.n.d., folio, of which but two copies are known, and which must be dated as far back as 1470 [see p. 600]. I believed hitherto (I am not yet sure that Campbell is right as to his date) that the first printed edition was German, s.l.n.d., very likely printed at Basel, about 1475, discovered by Tross, the Paris Bookseller.[11] The next editions are the French of the 4th April, 1480,[12] and 8th February of the same year,[13] Easter being the 2nd of April, then the Latin,[14] Dutch,[15] and Italian[16] editions, and after the English editions of Pynson and Wynkin de Worde.
In what tongue was Mandeville’s Book written?
The fact that the first edition of it was printed either in German or in Dutch, only shows that the scientific progress was greater and printing more active in such towns as Basel, Nuremberg and Augsburg than in others. At first, one might believe that there were three original texts, probably in French, English, and vulgar Latin; the Dean of Tongres, Radulphus of Rivo, a native of Breda, writes indeed in his _Gesta Pontificum Leodiensium_, 1616, p. 17: “Hoc anno Ioannes Mandeuilius natione Anglus vir ingenio, & arte medendi eminens, qui toto fere terrarum orbe peragrato, _tribus linguis_ peregrinationem suam doctissime _conscripsit_, in alium orbê nullis finibus clausum, lōgeque hoc quietiorem, & beatiorem migrauit 17. Nouembris. Sepultus in Ecclesia Wilhelmitarum non procul à moenibus Ciuitatis Leodiensis.” The Dean of Tongres died in 1483;[17] Mr. Warner, on the authority of the _Bulletin de l’Inst. Archéol. Liégeois_, xvi. 1882, p. 358, gives 1403 as the date of the death of Radulphus. However, Mandeville himself says (_Warner, Harley_, 4383) at the end of his introduction, p. 3:—“Et sachez qe ieusse cest escript mis en latyn pur pluis briefment deuiser; mes, pur ceo qe plusours entendent mieltz romantz qe latin, ieo lay mys en romance, pur ceo qe chescun lentende et luy chiualers et les seignurs et lez autres nobles homes qi ne sciuent point de latin ou poy, et qount estee outre meer, sachent et entendent, si ieo dye voir ou noun, et si ieo erre en deuisant par noun souenance ou autrement, qils le puissent adresser et amender, qar choses de long temps passez par la veue tornent en obly, et memorie de homme ne puet mye tot retenir ne comprendre.” From this passage and from the Latin text: “Incipit itinerarius a terra Angliæ ad partes Iherosolimitanas et in ulteriores transmarinas, editus primo in lingua gallicana a milite suo autore anno incarnacionis Domini m. ccc. lv, in civitate Leodiensi, et paulo post in eadem civitate translatus in hanc formam latinam.” (P. 33 of the _Relation des Mongols ou Tartars par le frère Jean du Plan de Carpin_, Paris, 1838). D’Avezac long ago was inclined to believe in an unique French version. The British Museum, English MS. (Cott., Titus. C. xvi.), on the other hand, has in the Prologue (cf. ed. 1725, p. 6): “And zee schulle undirstonde, that I have put this Boke out of _Latyn_ into _Frensche_, and translated it azen out of _Frensche_ into _Englyssche_, that every Man of my Nacioun may undirstonde it....”[18]
But we shall see that—without taking into account the important passage in French quoted above, and probably misunderstood by the English translator—the English version, a sentence of which, not to be found in the Latin manuscripts, has just been given, is certainly posterior to the French text, and therefore that the abstract of Titus C. xvi, has but a slight value. There can be some doubt only for the French and the Latin texts.
Dr. Carl Schönborn[19] and Herr Eduard Mätzner,[20] “respectively seem to have been the first to show that the current Latin and English texts cannot possibly have been made by Mandeville himself. Dr. J. Vogels states the same of unprinted Latin versions which he has discovered in the British Museum, and he has proved it as regards the Italian version.”[21]
“In Latin, as Dr. Vogels has shown, there are five independent versions. Four of them, which apparently originated in England (one manuscript, now at Leyden, being dated in 1390) have no special interest; the fifth, or vulgate Latin text, was no doubt made at Liège, and has an important bearing on the author’s identity. It is found in twelve manuscripts, all of the 15th century, and is the only Latin version as yet printed.”[22]
The universal use of the French language at the time would be an argument in favour of the original text being in this tongue, if corrupt proper names, abbreviations in the Latin text, etc., did not make the fact still more probable.
The story of the English version, as it is told by Messrs. Nicholson and Warner, is highly interesting: The English version was made from a “mutilated archetype,” in French (Warner, p. x.) of the beginning of the 15th century, and was used for all the known English manuscripts, with the exception of the Cotton and Egerton volumes—and also for all the printed editions until 1725. Mr. Nicholson[23] pointed out that it is defective in the passage extending from p. 36, l. 7: “And there were to ben 5 Soudans,” to p. 62, l. 25: “the Monkes of the Abbeye of ten tyme,” in Halliwell’s edition (1839) from Titus C. xvi. which corresponds to Mr. Warner’s Egerton text, p. 18, l. 21: “for the Sowdan,” and p. 32, l. 16, “synges oft tyme.” It is this bad text which, until 1725,[24] has been printed as we just said, with numerous variants, including the poor edition of Mr. Ashton[25] who has given the text of East instead of the Cotton text under the pretext that the latter was not legible.[26]
Two revisions of the English version were made during the first quarter of the 15th century; one is represented by the British Museum Egerton MS. 1982 and the abbreviated Bodleian MS. e. Mus. 116; the other by the Cotton MS. Titus C. xvi. This last one gives the text of the edition of 1725 often reprinted till Halliwell’s (1839 and 1866).[27] The Egerton MS. 1982 has been reproduced in a magnificent volume edited in 1889 for the Roxburghe Club par Mr. G. F. Warner, of the British Museum;[28] this edition includes also the French text from the Harley MS. 4383 which, being defective from the middle of chap. xxii. has been completed with the Royal MS. 20 B. X. Indeed the Egerton MS. 1982 is the only complete English manuscript of the British Museum,[29] as, besides seven copies of the defective text, three leaves are missing in the Cotton MS. after f. 53, the text of the edition of 1725 having been completed with the Royal MS. 17 B.[30]
Notwithstanding its great popularity, Mandeville’s Book could not fail to strike with its similarity with other books of travels, with Friar Odoric’s among others. This similarity has been the cause that occasionally the Franciscan Friar was given as a companion to the Knight of St. Albans, for instance, in the manuscripts of Mayence and Wolfenbüttel.[31] Some Commentators have gone too far in their appreciation and the Udine monk has been treated either as a plagiary or a liar! Old Samuel Purchas, in his address to the Reader printed at the beginning of Marco Polo’s text (p. 65), calls his countryman! Mandeville the greatest Asian traveller next (if next) to Marco Polo, and he leaves us to understand that the worthy knight has been pillaged by some priest![32] Astley uses strong language; he calls Odoric a _great liar!_[33]
Others are fair in their judgment, Malte-Brun, for instance, marked what Mandeville borrowed from Odoric, and La Renaudière is also very just in the _Biographie Universelle_. But what Malte-Brun and La Renaudière showed in a general manner, other learned men, such as Dr. S. Bormans, Sir Henry Yule, Mr. E. W. B. Nicholson,[34] Dr. J. Vogels,[35] M. Léopold Delisle, Herr A. Bovenschen,[36] and last, not least, Dr. G. F. Warner, have in our days proved that not only has the book bearing Mandeville’s name been compiled from the works of Vincent of Beauvais, Jacques of Vitry, Boldensel, Carpini, Odoric, etc., but that it was written neither by a Knight of St. Albans, by an Englishman, or by a Sir John Mandeville, but very likely by the physician John of Burgundy or John a Beard.
In a repertory of _La Librairie de la Collégiale de Saint Paul à Liège au XVᵉ. Siècle_, published by Dr. Stanislas Bormans, in the _Bibliophile Belge_, Brussels, 1866, p. 236, is catalogued under No. 240: _Legenda de Joseph et Asseneth ejus uxore, in papiro. In eodem itinerarium Johannis de Mandevilla militis, apud guilhelmitanos Leodienses sepulti_.
Dr. S. Bormans has added the following note: “Jean Mandeville, ou Manduith, théologien et mathématicien, était né à St. Alban en Angleterre d’une famille noble. On le surnomma pour un motif inconnu, _ad Barbam_ et _magnovillanus_. En 1322, il traversa la France pour aller en Asie, servit quelque temps dans les troupes du Sultan d’Egypte et revint seulement en 1355 en Angleterre. Il mourut à Liège chez les Guilhemins, le 17th Novembre, 1372. Il laissa au dit monastère plusieurs MSS. de ses œuvres fort vantés, tant de ses voyages que de la médecine, écrits de sa main; il y avait encore en ladite maison plusieurs meubles qu’il leur laissa pour mémoire. Il a laissé quelques livres de médecine qui n’ont jamais été imprimés, des _tabulae astronomicae_, de _chorda recta et umbra, de doctrina theologica_. La relation de son voyage est en latin, français et anglais; il raconte, en y mêlant beaucoup de fables, ce qu’il a vu de curieux en Egypte, en Arabie et en Perse.”
Then is inserted, an abstract from Lefort, _Liège Herald_, at the end of the 17th century, from _Jean d’Outremeuse_, which we quote from another publication of Dr. Bormans’ as it contains the final sentence: “Mort enfin, etc.” not to be found in the paper of the _Bibliophile Belge_.
In his introduction to the _Chronique et geste de Jean des Preis dit d’Outremeuse_, Brussels, F. Hayez, 1887 (_Collection des Chroniques belges inédites_), Dr. Stanislas Bormans writes, pp. cxxxiii.–cxxxiv.: “L’an M.CCC.LXXII, mourut à Liège, le 12 Novembre, un homme fort distingué par sa naissance, avant de s’y faire connoître sous le nom de Jean de Bourgogne dit à la Barbe. Il s’ouvrit néanmoins au lit de la mort à Jean d’Outremeuse, son compère, et institué son exécuteur testamentaire. De vrai il se titra, dans le précis de sa dernière volonté, messire _Jean de Mandeville, chevalier, comte de Montfort en Angleterre, et seigneur de l’isle de Campdi et du château Perouse_. Ayant cependant eu le malheur de tuer, en son pays, un comte qu’il ne nomme pas, il s’engagea à parcourir les trois parties du monde. Vint à Liège en 1343. Tout sorti qu’il étoit d’une noblesse très-distinguée, il aima de s’y tenir caché. Il étoit, au reste, grand naturaliste, profond philosophe et astrologue, y joint en particulier une connoissance très singulière de la physique, se trompant rarement lorsqu’il disoit son sentiment à l’égard d’un malade, s’il en reviendroit ou pas. Mort enfin, on l’enterra aux F. F. Guillelmins, au faubourg d’Avroy, comme vous avez vu plus amplement cydessous.”
It is not the first time that the names _Jean de Mandeville_ and _Jean à la Barbe_ are to be met with, as Ortelius, in his description of Liège, included in his Itinerary of Belgium, has given the epitaph of the knightly physician:[37(1)]
“Leodium primo aspectu ostentat in sinistra ripa (nam dextra vinetis plena est,) magna, & populosa suburbia ad collium radices, in quorum iugis multa sunt, & pulcherrima Monasteria, inter quae magnificum illud ac nobile D. Laurentio dicatum ab Raginardo episcopo, vt habet Sigebertus, circa ann. sal. M.XXV aedificatum est in hac quoq. regione Guilelmitarū Coenobium in quo epitaphiū hoc Ioannis à Mandeuille excepimus: _Hic iacet vir nobilis Dn̄s Ioēs de Mandeville al Dcvs ad barbam miles dn̄s de Cāpdi natvs de Anglia medicīe pfessor devotissimvs orator et bonorvm largissimvs paupribus erogator qvi toto qvasi orbe lvstrato leodii diem vite sve clavsit extremvm āno Dni M CCC° LXXI°[37(2)] mēnsis novēbr die XVII_.[37(3)]
“Haec in lapide, in quo caelata viri armati imago, leonem calcantis, barba bifurcata, ad caput manus benedicens, & vernacula haec verba: _vos ki paseis sor mi pour lamovr deix proies por mi_. Clypeus erat vacuus, in quo olim laminam fuisse dicebant æream, & eius in ea itidem caelata insignia, leonem videlicet argenteum, cui ad pectus lunula rubea, in campo caeruleo, quem limbus ambiret denticulatus ex auro, eius nobis ostendebāt & cultros, ephippiaque, & calcaria, quibus vsum fuisse asserebat in peragrando toto fere terrarum orbe, vt clarius eius testatur itinerarium, quod typis etiam excusum passim habetur.”[37]
Dr. Warner writes in the _National Biography_:
“There is abundant proof that the tomb of the author of the _Travels_ was to be seen in the Church of the Guillemins or Guillelmites at Liège down to the demolition of the building in 1798. The fact of his burial there, with the date of his death, 17th November, 1372, was published by Bale in 1548 (_Summarium_, f. 149 _b_), and was confirmed independently by Jacob Meyer (_Annales rerum Flandric_., 1561, p. 165) and Lud. Guicciardini. (_Paesi Bassi_, 1567, p. 281.)”
In a letter dated from Bodley’s Library, 17th March, 1884, to _The Academy_, 12th April, 1884, No. 623, Mr. Edward B. Nicholson drew attention to the abstract from Jean d’Outremeuse, and came to the conclusion that the writer of Mandeville’s relation was a _profound liar_, and that he was the Liège Professor of Medicine, John of Burgundy or _à la Barbe_. He adds: “If, in the matter of literary honesty, John a Beard was a bit of a knave, he was very certainly no fool.”
On the other hand, M. Léopold Delisle,[38] has shown that two manuscripts, Nouv. acq. franç. 4515 (Barrois, 24) and Nouv. acq. franç. 4516 (Barrois, 185), were part formerly of one volume copied in 1371 by Raoulet of Orleans and given in the same year to King Charles V. by his physician Gervaise Crestien, _viz._ one year before the death of the so-called Mandeville; one of these manuscripts—now separate—contains the Book of Jehan de Mandeville, the other one, a treatise of “la preservacion de epidimie, minucion ou curacion d’icelle faite de maistre Jehan de Bourgoigne, autrement dit à la Barbe, professeur en médicine et cytoien du Liège,” in 1365. This bringing together is certainly not fortuitous.
Sir Henry Yule traces thus the sources of the spurious work: “Even in that part of the book which may be admitted with probability to represent some genuine experience, there are distinct traces that another work has been made use of, more or less, as an aid in the compilation, we might almost say, as a framework to fill up. This is the itinerary of the German knight William of Boldensele, written in 1336 at the desire of Cardinal Talleyrand de Perigord. A cursory comparison of this with Mandeville leaves no doubt of the fact that the latter has followed its thread, using its suggestions, and on many subjects its expressions, though digressing and expanding on every side, and too often eliminating the singular good sense of the German traveller. After such a comparison we may indicate as examples Boldensele’s account of Cyprus (_Mandeville, Halliwell’s_ ed. 1866, p. 28, and p. 10), of Tyre and the coast of Palestine (_Mandeville_, 29, 30, 33, 34), of the journey from Gaza to Egypt (34), passages about Babylon of Egypt (40), about Mecca (42), the general account of Egypt (45), the pyramids (52), some of the particular wonders of Cairo, such as the slave-market, the chicken-hatching stoves, and the apples of Paradise, _i.e._ plantains (49), the Red Sea (57), the convent on Sinai (58, 60), the account of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (74–76), etc.”
He adds: “It is curious that no passage in Mandeville can be plausibly traced to Marco Polo, with one exception. This is (_Halliwell’s_ ed., p. 163) where he states that at Ormus the people, during the great heat, lie in water,—a circumstance mentioned by Polo, though not by Odoric. We should suppose it most likely that this fact had been interpolated in the copy of Odoric used by Mandeville; for, if he had borrowed it direct from Polo, he would have borrowed more.” (_Encyclopædia Britannica_, p. 474.)
“Leaving this question, there remains the more complex one whether the book contains, in any measure, facts and knowledge acquired by actual travels and residence in the East. We believe that it may, but only as a small portion of the whole, and that confined entirely to the section of the work which treats of the Holy Land, and of the different ways of getting thither, as well as of Egypt, and in general of what we understand by the Levant.” (_Ibid._ p. 473.)
Dr. Warner deals the final blow in the _National Biography_: “The alphabets which he gives have won him some credit as a linguist, but only the Greek and the Hebrew (which were readily accessible) are what they pretend to be, and that which he calls Saracen actually comes from the _Cosmographia_ of Æthicus! His knowledge of Mohammedanism and its Arabic formulæ impressed even Yule. He was, however, wholly indebted for that information to the _Liber de Statu Saracenorum_ of William of Tripoli (_circa_ 1270), as he was to the _Historiæ Orientis_ of Hetoum, the Armenian (1307), for much of what he wrote about Egypt. In the last case, indeed, he shows a rare sign of independence, for he does not, with Hetoum, end his history of the sultanate about 1300, but carries it onto the death of En-Násir (1341), and names two of his successors. Although his statements about them are not historically accurate, this fact and a few other details suggest that he may really have been in Egypt, if not at Jerusalem, but the proportion of original matter is so very far short of what might be expected that even this is extremely doubtful.”
With this final quotation, we may take leave of John of Mandeville, aliàs John a Beard.
H. C.
[1] “The _raphia_, here called the ‘Devil’s date,’ is celebrated as having the largest leaf in the vegetable Kingdom,” etc. In his translation of Lacerda’s journey he calls it _Raphia vinifera_.
[2] MANDEVILLE, Jehan de [By Edward Byron Nicholson, M.A., and Colonel Henry Yule, C.B.] Ext. from the _Encyclopæd. Britan._ 9th ed., xv. 1883, ppt. 4to., pp. 4.
[3] _Encyclop. Brit._ xv. p. 473.
[4] British Museum, Harley, 4383, f. 1 _verso_.
[5] _Les Voyages en Asie au XIVᵉ siècle du Bienheureux frère Odoric de Pordenone_. Paris, 1891, p. cxvi.
[6] Bibliographische Untersuchungen über die Reise-Beschreibung des Sir John Maundeville.—Dem Herrn Samuel Gottfried Reiche, Rector und Professor des Gymnasiums zu St. Elisabet in Breslau und Vice-Präses der Schlesischen Gesellschaft für Vaterländische Cultur, Ritter des rothen Adlerordens, zur Feier Seines Amts-Jubelfestes am 30. October 1840 im Namen des Gymnasiums zu St. Maria Magdalena gewidmet von Dr. Carl. Schönborn, Director, Rector und Professor.—Breslau, gedruckt bei Grass, Barth und Comp., ppt. 4to. pp. 24.
[7] Bibliographia geographica Palaestinae. Zunächst kritische Uebersicht gedruckter und ungedruckter Beschreibungen der Reisen ins heilige Land. Von Titus Tobler.—Leipzig, Verlag von S. Hirzel. 1867, 8vo., pp. iv.–265.=: C. 1336 (1322–1356). Der englische ritter John Maundeville, pp. 36–39.
[8] Bibliotheca geographica Palestinae. Chronologisches Verzeichniss der auf die Geographie des Heiligen Landes bezüglichen Literatur von 333 bis 1878 und Versuch einer Cartographie. Herausgegeben von Reinhold Röhricht. Berlin, H. Reuther, 1890, 8vo, pp. xx–742.
[9] _Bibliotheca Sinica_.—Dictionnaire bibliographique des ouvrages relatifs à l’empire chinois par Henri Cordier. Paris, Ernest Leroux, 1878–1895, 3 vol. 8vo. col. 943–959, 1921–1927, 2201.
[10] Jean de Mandeville. Ext. du _T’oung Pao_, vol. ii. No. 4, Leide, E. J. Brill, 1891, 8vo, pp. 38.
[11] Jch Otto von diemeringen ein ‖ Thůmherre zů Metz in Lothoringen . han dises bůch verwandelvsz ‖ welschs vnd vsz latin zů tütsch durch das die tütschen lüte ouch moegent ‖ dar inne lesen von menigen wunderlichen sachen die dor inne geschribe ‖ sind . von fremden landen vn̄ fremden tieren von fremden lüten vnd von ‖ irem glouben . von iren wesen von iren kleidern . vnd vō vil andern wun ‖ deren als hie noch in den capitelen geschriben stat. Und ist das bůch in ‖ fünf teil geteilt vnd saget das erst bůch von den landen vnd von den we ‖ gen vsz tütschen nider landen gen Jerusalem zů varen . vnd zů sant Ka | ‖ therinē grab vnd zů dem berg Synai . vnd von den landen vnd von den ‖ wundern die man vnterwegen do zwischen vinden mag. Jtem von des ‖ herren gewalt vnd herrschafft der do heisset der Soldan vnd von sinem ‖ wesen. Das ander bůch saget ob ymant wolt alle welt vmbfaren was ‖ lands vnd was wunders er vinden moecht. Jn manchen steten vn in vil ‖ insulen dor inne er kame . vnd saget ouch von den wegen vnd von den lā ‖ den vn̄ lüten was in des grossen herrē land ist. d̄ ȣ do heisset zů latin Ma ‖ gnus canis | das ist zů tütsch der grosz hunt. der ist so gar gewaltig vnd ‖ so rich das im vff erden an gold an edlem gestein vn̄an anderm richtům ‖ niemant gelichen mag . on allein priester Johann von Jndia. Das drit ‖ bůch saget von des vor genanten herren des grossen hůnds glowben vn̄ ‖ gewonheit vnd wie er von erst her komen ist vnd von andern sachen vil ‖ Das vierde bůch saget von jndia vnd von priester Johann vnd von siner ‖ herschafft . von sinem vrsprung vnd von siner heiligkeit von sinem glou | ‖ ben von siner gewonheit vnd vil andern wundern die in sinem lande sind ‖ Das fünfft bůch saget von manchen heydischen glouben vnd ir gewon | ‖ heit vn̄ ouch von menigerlei cristen glouben die gensit mers sint die doch ‖ nit gar vnsern glouben hand. Jtem von menigerlei Jüden glouben vnd ‖ wie vil cristen land sint vnd doch nicht vnsern glouben haltend noch re | ‖ chte cristen sind. Folio; black letter.
[12] Ce liure est eppelle ma // deuille et fut fait i compose // par monsieur iehan de man // deuille cheualier natif dāgle // terre de la uille de saīct aleī // Et parle de la terre de pro // mission cest assavoir de ieru // salem et de pluseurs autres // isles de mer et les diuerses i // estranges choses qui sont es // dites isles.
_Ends recto_ fᵒ. 88: Cy finist ce tres plaisant // liure nome Mandeville par // lanc moult autentiquement // du pays et terre d’oultre mer // Et fut fait Lā Mil cccc // lxxx le 1111 iour dauril, s.l., without any printer’s name; small folio; ff. 88; sig. _a_ (7 ff.)—l. (9 ff.); others 8 ff.—Grenville Library, 6775.
[13] F. 1 _recto_: Ce liure est appelle // mandeuille et fut fait et // compose par monsieur // iehan de mandeuille che // ualier natif dangleterre // de la uille de sainct alein // Et parle de la terre de // promission cest assauoir // de iherusalem et de plu // seurs autres isles de mer // et les diuerses et estran // ges choses qui sont esd’ // isles.—_Ends verso_ f. 93: Cy finist ce tresplay // sant liure nōme Mande // uille parlāt moult anté // tiquement du pays r t’re // doultre mer Jmprime a // lyō sur le rosne Lan Mil cccclxxx le viii iour de // freuier a la requeste de // Maistre Bartholomieu // Buyer bourgoys du dit // lyon. Small folio.
[14] F. 1 _recto_. Jtinerarius domi//ni Johānis de mā//deville militis.—F. 2 _recto_: Tabula capitulorum in // itinerarium ad partes Jhe=// rosolimitanas. ⁊ ad vlterio // res trāsmarinas domini Jo//hannis de Mandeville mili//tis Jncipit feliciter.—F. 4. _recto_: Jncipit Itinerarius a ter//ra Anglie in ptes Jherosoli =//mitanas. ⁊ in vlteriores trās//marinas. editus primo in lī//gua gallicana a milite suo au//tore Anno incarnatōnis dn̄i //M. ccc. lv. in ciuitate Leodi // ensi. ⁊ paulo post in eadē ciui//tate trāslatus in hanc formā // latinam. //
_Ends_ f. 71 _verso_: Explicit itinerarius domini // Johannis de Mandeville // militis. Small 4to, black letter, ff. 71 on a col., sig. _a–i_ iij; _a–h_ by 8 = 64 ff.; _i_, 7 ff.
[15] Reysen.—s.l.n.d., without printer’s name; fol. 108 ff. on 2 col. black letter, without sig., etc.
F. 1 _recto_: Dit is die tafel van // desen boecke // (D)at eerste capittel van // desen boeck is Hoe dat Jan vā//mandauille schyet wt enghe//lāt.... f. 108 vᵒ 26th line: regneert in allen tiden // Amen // ¶ _Laus deo in altissimo_ //.
See Campbell, _supra_, p. 599.
[16] F. 1 _verso_: Tractato de le piu marauegliose cosse e piu notabile che // se trouano in le parte del mōdo redute ⁊ collecte soto bre//uita in el presente cōpēdio dal strenuissimo caualẽr sperō // doro Johanne de Mandauilla anglico nato ne la Citā // de sancto albano el quale secōdo dio prñcialmente uisi // tato quali tute le parte habitabel de el mōdo cossi fidelm̄ // te a notato tute quelle piu degne cosse che la trouato e ve//duto in esse parte ⁊ chi bene discorre q̃sto libro auerra p // fecta cognitione de tuti li reami p̱uincie natione e popu//li gente costumi leze hystorie ⁊ degne antiquitate cō bre//uitade le quale ꝑte da altri non sono tractate ⁊ parte piu // cōsusamēte dalchū gran ualente homini son state tocate ⁊ amagiore fede el p̃sato auctore in ꝑsona e stato nel 1322. in//yerusalem Jn Asia menore chiamata Turchia i Arme//nia grande e in la picola. Jn Scythia zoe in Tartaria in // persia Jn Syria o uero suria Jn Arabia in egipto alto // ⁊ in lo inferiore in libia in la parte grande de ethiopia in // Caldea in amazonia in india mazore in la meza ⁊ in la // menore in div’se sette de latini greci iudei e barbari chri//stiani ⁊ infideli ⁊ i molte altre prouincie como appare nel // tractato de sotto.—_Ends_ f. 114 _verso_: Explicit Johannes d’Mādeuilla impressus Medio//lani ductu ⁊ auspicijs Magistri Petri de corneno pri // die Callendas augusti M.CCCCLXXX. Joha//ne Galeazo Maria Sfortia Vicecomitte Duce no // stro inuictissimo ac principe Jucondissimo. Small 4to; ff. 114; sig. _a-o_ × 8 = 112 ff.; 1 f. between _a_ and _b_.
[17] _Gesta Pont. Leodiensium_.—Vita Radvlphi de Rivo ex eius scriptis: “Obijt Radulphus anno, 1483.”
[18] This passage is not to be found in the Egerton MS. 1982, nor in the Latin versions.
[19] _Bib. Untersuchungen_.
[20] Altenglische Sprachproben nebst einem Wörterbuche unter Mitwirkung von Karl Goldbeck herausgegeben von Eduard Mätzner. Erster Band: Sprachproben. Zweite Abtheilung: Prosa. Berlin. Weidmannsche Buchhandlung. (Vol. i. 1869, large 8vo, pp. 415; vol. i., _John Maundeville_, pp. 152–221.)
[21] _Encyclopædia. Brit._, p. 475.
[22] _Nat. Biog._ p. 23–24.
[23] _The Academy_, x. p. 477.—_Encyclopædia Britannica_, 9th ed., XV., p. 475.
[24] The // Voiage // and // Travaile // of // Sir John Maundevile, kt. // Which Treateth of the // Way to Hierusalem; and of // Marvayles of Inde, // With other // Ilands and Countryes. //—Now publish’d entire from an Original MS. // in the Cotton Library. //—London: // Printed for J. Woodman, and D. Lyon, in // Russel-Street, Covent-Garden, and C. Davis, // in Hatton-Garden. 1725, 8vo, 5. ff. n. c. + pp. xvi.—384 + 4 ff. n. c.
[25] The Voiage and Travayle of Sir John Maundeville Knight which treateth of the way towards Hierosallun and of marvayles of Inde with other ilands and countreys. Edited, Annotated, and Illustrated in Facsimile by John Ashton.... London, Pickering & Chatto, 1887, large 8vo., pp. xxiv.–289.
[26] _L.c._ p. vi.
[27] The Voiage and Travaile of Sir John Maundevile, Kt. which treateth of the way to Hierusalem; and of Marvayles of Inde, with other ilands and countryes. Reprinted from the Edition of A.D. 1725. With an introduction, additional notes, and Glossary. By J. O. Halliwell, Esq., F.S.A., F.R.A.S. London: Published by Edward Lumley, M.D.CCC.XXXIX., 8vo, pp. xvii.–xii.–326.
The Voiage and Travaille of Sir John Maundevile ... By J. O. Halliwell, London: F. S. Ellis, MDCCCLXVI., 8vo, pp xxxi.–326.
[28] The Buke of John Maundeuill being the Travels of sir John Mandeville, knight 1322–1356 a hitherto unpublished English version from the unique copy (Egerton Ms. 1982) in the British Museum edited together with the French text, notes, and an introduction by George F. Warner, M.A., F.S.A., assistant-keeper of Manuscripts in the British Museum. Illustrated with twenty-eight miniatures reproduced in facsimile from the additional MS. 24,189. Printed for the Roxburghe Club. Westminster, Nichols and Sons.... MDCCCLXXXIX., large 4to, pp. xlvi. + 232 + 28 miniatures.
[29] There are in the British Museum twenty-nine MSS. of Mandeville, of which ten are French, nine English, six Latin, three German, and one Irish. Cf. _Warner_, p. x.
[30] Cf. _Warner_, p. 61.
[31] Mayence, Chapter’s Library: “Incipit Itinerarius fidelis Fratris ODERICI, _socii Militis Mendavil_, per Indiam.”—Wolfenbüttel, Ducal Library, No. 40, Weissemburg: “Incipit itinerarius fratris ODERICI socii militis Mandauil per Indiam.”—HENRI CORDIER, _Odoric de Pordenone_, p. lxxii. and p. lxxv.
[32] _Purchas, His Pilgrimes_, 3rd Pt., London, 1625: “and, O that it were possible to doe as much for our Countriman Mandeuil, who next (if next) was the greatest Asian Traueller that euer the World had, & hauing falne amongst theeues, neither Priest, nor Leuite can know him, neither haue we hope of a Samaritan to releeue him.”
[33] _Astley_ (iv. p. 620): “The next Traveller we meet with into _Tartary_, and the Eastern Countries, after _Marco Polo_, is Friar _Odoric_, of _Udin_ in Friuli, a _Cordelier_; who set-about the Year 1318, and at his Return the Relation of it was drawn-up, from his own Mouth, by Friar _William_ of _Solanga_, in 1330. _Ramusio_ has inserted it in _Italian_, in the second Volume of his Collection; as _Hakluyt_, in his Navigations, has done the _Latin_, with an _English_ Translation. This is a most superficial Relation, and full of _Lies_; such as People with the Heads of Beasts, and Valleys haunted with Spirits: In one of which he pretends to have entered, protected by the Sign of the Cross; yet fled for Fear, at the Sight of a Face that grinned at him. In short, though he relates some Things on the _Tartars_ and _Manci_ (as he writes _Manji_) which agree with _Polo’s_ Account; yet it seems plain, from the Names of Places and other Circumstances, that he never was in those Countries, but imposed on the Public the few Informations he had from others, mixed with the many Fictions of his own. He set out again for the East in 1331; but warned, it seems, by an Apparition a few Miles from _Padua_, he returned thither, and died.” And a final blow in the index: “_Oderic, Friar, Travels of_, iv. 620 a. _A great liar!!_”
[34] E. B. Nicholson.—Letters to the _Academy_, 11th November, 1876; 12th February, 1881. E. B. N. and Henry Yule, MANDEVILLE, in _Encyclopædia Britannica_, 9th ed., 1883, pp. 472–475.
[35] Die ungedruckten Lateinischen Versionen Mandeville’s. (Beilage zum Programm des Gymnasiums zu Crefeld.) 1886.
[36] Untersuchungen über Johan von Mandeville und die Quellen seiner Reisebeschreibung. Von Albert Bovenschen. (_Zeitschrift d. Ges. für Erdkunde zu Berlin_, XXIII. Bd., 3 u. 4 Hft. No. 135, 136, pp. 177–306.)
[37] (1) Itinerarivm // per nonnv. las // Galliæ Belgicæ partes, // Abrahami Ortelii et // Ioannis Viviani. // Ad Gerardvm Mercatorem, // Cosmographvm. // Antverpiæ, // Ex officina Christophori Plantini. // clↄ. lↄ. lxxxiv. // small 8vo, pp. 15–16.
(2) Read 1372.
(3) _Purchas, His Pilgrimes_, 3rd Pt., Lond., 1625, reproduces it on p. 128: “Hic jacet vir nobilis, D. _Ioannes de Mandeville_, aliter dictus ad Barbam, Miles, Dominus de Campdi, natus de Anglia, Medicinæ Professor, deuotissimus, orator, & bonorum largissimus pauperibus erogator qui toto quasi orbe lustrato, _Leodij_ diem vitæ suæ clausit extremum. Anno Dom. 1371, Mensis Nouembris, die 17.”
[38] _Bibliothèque nationale:—Catalogue des manuscrits des fonds Libri et Barrois_. Paris, 1888. 8vo. cf. pp. 251–253.
INDEX
Transcriber’s Note:
Numbers in _italics_ refer to Prefatory Material in volume I ‘i.’ and ‘ii.’ indicate volume referred to ‘n’ indicates item is in Notes on that page
Aas, Asu, _see_ Alans Abacan, a Tartar general, ii. 255, 261n, 596n Ábah, _see_ Ávah Abaji, Kúblái’s son, i. 361n Ábáká (Abaga), Khan of Persia, i. 33n, 36n, 91n, 103n, ii. 465–467, 474, 475, 477n, 495n Abano, Pietro of, his notice of Polo, _119_ Abash (Ḥabsh), _see_ Abyssinia Abba Gregory, ii. 433n Abbás, Sháh, i. 90n Abbott, Consul Keith E., i. 81n, 82n, 89n, 92n, 96n, 99n, 106n, 111n, 113n, 114n, 125n Abdul Kuri islands, ii. 405n —— Mejid, i. 175n Abeskun (Baxon), on the Caspian, i. 59n Abher, i. 38n, 82n Abkashian forests, boxwood of the, i. 57n _Abnús_, ebony, ii. 272n Abraha, ruler of Yemen, ii. 434n Abraiaman, _see_ Brahmans Abubakr, Atabeg of Fars, i. 85n, ii. 348n —— Ibrahim, and Mahomed, engineers employed by Kúblái, ii. 168n Abu’l Abbas Ahmed VII., Khalif of Baghdad, i. 69n —— Fázl, i. 103n, 168n, 169n, ii. 367, 374n Abulfeda, his geography, _4_, i. 3n, 6n, 9n, 53n, 57n, 58n, 75n, 81n, 110n, 385n, ii. 237n, 286n, 367n, 377n, 486n, 489n; at the siege of Acre, 165n Abulfiez Khan, king of Bokhara, i. 88n Abu Nasr Mohammed IX., Khalif of Baghdad, i. 69n —— Saïd, i. 86n, ii. 347n Abyssinia (Abash), ii. 427 _seqq._, 431n; its king’s punishment of Soldan of Aden, 428–430; dominion on the coast, mediæval history and chronology, 434n–437n; table of kings, 435n; wars with Mahomedan states, 436n Acbalec Manzi, “White City of the Manzi frontier,” ii. 33, 34n, 35n Acbalec or Acbaluc (Cheng-ting fu), ii. 13, 14n Accambale, king of Champa, ii. 267, 270n Achan, i. 66n Achin, Acheh, Achem, ii. 283n, 286n, 295n, 296n, 300n, 303n, 305n, 307n; its gold and lign-aloes, 287n; conversion of, 288n; its great power at one time, 289n; elephants at, 289n —— Head, ii. 300n, 307n Achmath, the Bailo, _see_ Ahmad Acomat Soldan (Ahmad Sultan), seizes throne of Tabriz, ii. 467; goes to encounter Argon, 468; rejects his remonstrance, 469; defeats and takes him, 470; hears of Argon’s escape, is taken and put to death, 473; notes on the history, 470n, 474n Acorn bread, i. 122n Acqui, Friar Jacopo d’, his notice of Polo, _54_, _67_, _119_ Acre, i. 17, 22; Broils at, between Venetians and Genoese, _42_; plan of, 18n; captured by Saracens, ii. 165n, 441n; wickedness of, 442n; Polos at, 593n Adam, Bishop and Pope of China, ii. 28n —— Seth, and the Tree of Life, legend of, i. 135n Adamodana, Castle of, i. 58n Adam’s Apple, i. 99n —— sepulchre on mountain (Adam’s Peak) in Ceylon, ii. 316, 328n; rubies, 316n; his teeth, hair, etc., 319–320; the footmark, 321n–322n Adel, apparently confused with Aden, ii. 433n, 435n, 440n Aden, Horse and other Trade with India, ii. 340, 348n, 390, 407, 427, 431, 438; Soldan’s treatment of a bishop, 428; Vengeance of King of Abyssinia on him, 430; confused with Adel, 433n; account of Kingdom, 438, 439n–440n; the Sultan, 438–439, 440n; intercourse and trade with China, tanks, 440n; view of, 441 Adoration of the Emperor, i. 391 _Adulis_, ii. 432n; inscription of, 434n Aegae, Ayas on the site of ancient, i. 16n Aepyornis and its eggs, ii. 416n–417n Aëtius, his prescription of musk, i. 279n, ii. 302n; of camphor, 302n Afghans, their use of the fat-tailed sheep, i. 100n Africa, Sea surrounding to the South, ii. 415n Agassiz, Professor, i. 100n Agathocles, Coins of, i. 163n Ἀγαθοῦ δαίμονος, island, ii. 310n Agha Ali Sháh, present representative of the Old Man of the Mountain,