The Travels of Marco Polo

Front Cover
Abaris Books, 1982 - Biography & Autobiography - 318 pages
"In the year 1260 two enterprising Venetian merchants, the brothers Niccolo and Maffeo Polo, set out from Constantinople on a voyage to the Orient. The train of adventures that led them to the court of the Great Khan Kubilai at Peking, then back to Europe, is related in the prologue of this book. They left for China then once more. For this second mission, the brothers Polo were accompanied by Niccolo's son Marco, then a lad of seventeen. The book about his adventures has been most familiar to English readers as The Travels of Marco Polo. It was called in the preface to the reading public at the end of the thirteenth century a 'description of the world.' It was in fact a description of a very large part of the world - from the Arctic to Java, from Zanzibar to Japan - and a surprisingly large part of it from first-hand observation. Some stretches of the trail Marco Polo blazed were trodden by no other European foot for over 600 years - not, perhaps, till the opening of the Burma Road during the last war. And the task of putting it on the map, in the most literal sense, is not yet complete. The present translation is intended to provide a straightforward and readable version, related as closely as possible to modern knowledge, and to acquaint today's reader with the fascinating situation in the Near and Far East, enabling him to place present-day events in that region in a historical perspective."--Jacket.

Contents

Introduction
7
The Road to Cathay 4475 59
44
Kubilai Khan 76105 95
76
From Peking to Bengal 106131 140
106
From Peking to Amoy 132158 167
132
From China to India 159174 210
159
India 175189 227
175
The Arabian Sea 190199
259
Northern Regions and Tartar Wars 200234
277
Epilogue
303

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About the author (1982)

Sir Henry Yule (1 May 1820 - 30 December 1889) was a Scottish Orientalist. He published many travel books including translations of the work of Marco Polo and Mirabilia by the 14th century Dominican FriarJordanus. Cordier, Henri, 1849-1925

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