Book contents
- Frontmatter
- III CATHAY UNDER THE MONGOLS. EXTRACTED FROM RASHIDUDDIN
- IV NOTICES OF THE LAND ROUTE TO CATHAY AND OF ASIATIC TRADE IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY
- V JOHN DE' MARIGNOLLI AND HIS RECOLLECTIONS OF EASTERN TRAVEL
- VI IBN BATUTA'S TRAVELS IN BENGAL AND CHINA
- VII THE JOURNEY OF BENEDICT GOËS FROM AGRA TO CATHAY
- APPENDIX I LATIN TEXT OF ODORIC, FROM A MS. IN THE BIBLIOTHÈQUE IMPÉRIALE
- APPENDIX II OLD ITALIAN TEXT OF ODORIC, FROM A MS. IN THE BIBLIOTECA PALATINA AT FLORENCE
- APPENDIX III TRANSCRIPT FROM THE ORIGINAL MS. OF THE FIRST TWO CHAPTERS OF PEGOLOTTI
- INDEX TO “CATHAY AND THE WAY THITHER”
VII - THE JOURNEY OF BENEDICT GOËS FROM AGRA TO CATHAY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- III CATHAY UNDER THE MONGOLS. EXTRACTED FROM RASHIDUDDIN
- IV NOTICES OF THE LAND ROUTE TO CATHAY AND OF ASIATIC TRADE IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY
- V JOHN DE' MARIGNOLLI AND HIS RECOLLECTIONS OF EASTERN TRAVEL
- VI IBN BATUTA'S TRAVELS IN BENGAL AND CHINA
- VII THE JOURNEY OF BENEDICT GOËS FROM AGRA TO CATHAY
- APPENDIX I LATIN TEXT OF ODORIC, FROM A MS. IN THE BIBLIOTHÈQUE IMPÉRIALE
- APPENDIX II OLD ITALIAN TEXT OF ODORIC, FROM A MS. IN THE BIBLIOTECA PALATINA AT FLORENCE
- APPENDIX III TRANSCRIPT FROM THE ORIGINAL MS. OF THE FIRST TWO CHAPTERS OF PEGOLOTTI
- INDEX TO “CATHAY AND THE WAY THITHER”
Summary
INTRODUCTORY NOTICE
The traveller whom we are now about to follow over one of the most daring journeys in the whole history of discovery, belongs to a very different period from those who have preceded him in this collection. Since the curtain fell on Ibn Batuta's wanderings two hundred and fifty years have passed away. After long suspension of intercourse with Eastern Asia, the rapid series of discoveries and re-discoveries that followed the successful voyage of De Grama have brought India, the Archipelago, China, and Japan into immediate communication with Europe by sea; the Jesuits have entered on the arena of the forgotten missions of the Franciscans, and have rapidly spread their organisation over the east, and to the very heart of each great eastern empire, to the courts of Agra, Peking, and Miako. Cathay has not been altogether forgotten in Europe, as many bold English enterprises by sea, and some by land, during the sixteenth century, testify; but to those actually engaged in the labours of commerce and religion in the Indies it remains probably but as a name connected with the fables of Italian poets, or with the tales deemed nearly as fabulous of old romancing travellers.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Cathay and the Way ThitherBeing a Collection of Medieval Notices of China, pp. 527 - 596Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1866