| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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|  | PRINCE HENRY THE NAVIGATOR
 III
           THE CRUSADES AND
          LAND TRAVEL. CIRCA 1100-1300.
            
           The pilgrims were
          the pioneers of the growth of Europe and of Christendom until Charlemagne, in
          one sense, in another and a broader sense until the Crusades.
               Their original
          work, as far as it can be called original at all, was entirely overshadowed by
          the Vikings, who made real discoveries of the first importance in hunting for
          new worlds to conquer; but when first the Viking rovers themselves, and then
          the Northmen, settled in the colonies and the old home, took up Christianity as
          the Arabs had taken up Islam, the pilgrim spirit was translated, as it were,
          into new and more powerful forms. Through the conversion of Hungary and of
          Scandinavia,—Europe, Christian Europe, was compacted together in a stronger
          Empire than that of Constantine or of Charlemagne—a spiritual federation, not a
          political unity—one and undivided not in visible subordination, but in a common
          zeal for a common faith. This was the state of the Latin world, and in a
          measure of the Greek and Russian world as well, by the middle of the eleventh
          century, when the Byzantine Emperors had broken the strength of the Eastern
          Caliphate, and recovered most of the realm of Heraclius; when the Roman Papacy
          under Leo IX., Hildebrand, and Urban began its political stage, aiming, and in
          great part successfully aiming, at an Imperial Federation of Europe under
          religion; when on every side, in Spain, in France, in England, in Germany, and
          in Italy, the nations that had been slowly built into that Domus Dei were
          filled with fresh life and purpose from the Norsemen, who, as pirates, or
          conquerors, or brothers, had settled among them. The long crusade that had gone
          on for four hundred years in Spain and in southern Italy and in the Levant,
          which had raged round the islands of the Mediterranean, or the passes of the
          Alps and Pyrenees, or the banks of the Loire and the Tiber,—was now, on the eve
          of the first Syrian Crusade of 1096, rapidly tending to decisive victory.
          Toledo was won back in 1084; the Norman dominion in the Two Sicilies had
          already taken the place of a weak and halting Christian defence against Arab emirs; pilgrims were going in thousands where there had been tens
          or units by the reopened land route through Hungary; only in the far East the
          first appearance of the Turks as Moslem champions,  threatened an ebb
          of the tide. Christendom had seen a wonderful expansion of the Heathen North;
          now that it had won the Northmen to itself, it was ready to imitate their
          example. The deliberate purpose of the Popes only gave direction to the
          universal feeling of restless and abundant energy longing for wider action. But
          it was not the crusading movement itself which brought so much new light, so
          much new knowledge of the world, to Europe, as the results of
          that impulse in trade, in travel, and in colonisation.  
    (1) From the
          eleventh century, from the beginning of this period, all the greater pilgrims, Saewulf the English-merchant, King Sigurd of Norway, Abbot
          Daniel of Kiev, and their followers, have something more in view than piety;
          they have a general interest in travel; some of them a special interest in
          trade; most of them go to fight as well as to pray.
   (2) But as the
          warlike spirit of the Church Militant seems to grow tired, and its efforts at
          founding new kingdoms—in Antioch, in Jerusalem, in Cyprus, in Byzantium—more
          and more fruitless, the direct expansion of European knowledge, begins in
          scientific travel. Vinland and Greenland and the White Sea and the other Norse
          discoveries were discoveries made by a great race for itself; unconnected as
          they were with the main lines of trade or with religious sentiment, they were unrealised by the general consciousness of the West. A full
          account of the Norse voyages to America was lying at the Vatican when Columbus
          was searching for proofs of land within reach,—of India, as he expected, in the
          place where he found an unknown continent and a new world. But no one knew of
          these; even the Greenland colony had been lost and forgotten in the fifteenth
          century; in 1553 the English sailors reached the land of Archangel without a
          suspicion that Ohthere or Thorer Hund had been there six hundred years before; Russia from the thirteenth to the
          sixteenth centuries was almost out of sight and mind under the Tartar and
          Moslem rule; but the missionaries and merchants and travellers who followed the crusading armies to the Euphrates, and crept along the caravan
          routes to Ceylon and the China Sea, added Further and Central Asia—Thesauri Arabum et divitis Indiæ—to the knowledge of Christendom.
   And as this
          knowledge was bound up with gain; as the Polos and their companions had really
          opened to the knowledge of the West those great prizes of material wealth which
          even the Rome of Trajan had never fully grasped, and which had been shared
          between Arabs and natives without a rival for so long; it was not likely to be
          easily forgotten. From that time, at the end of the thirteenth century, to the
          success of the Portuguese on another road, at the end of the fifteenth,
          European interest was fairly engaged in pressing in upon the old land-routes and
          getting an ever larger share of their profits.
               (3) There was
          another side of the same problem, a still brighter hope for men who could dare
          to try it. By finding a sea-path to the Indian store-house, mariners like the
          Venetians and Genoese, or their Spanish pupils, might cut into the treasuries
          of the world at their very source, found a trade-empire for their country, and
          gain the sole command of heaven on earth, of the true terrestrial paradise.
               Then masters of
          the wealth of the East and of the fighting power of the West, the Christian
          nations might crush their old enemy, Islam, between two weights, hammer and
          anvil; might fairly strike for the rule of the entire habitable globe.
               It was with thoughts
          of this kind, vaguely inspired by the Crusades and their legacy of discovery
          from Bagdad to Cathay, that the Vivaldi left Genoa to find an ocean way round
          Africa in 1281-91, “with the hope of going to the parts of the Indies”; that Malocello reached the Canary Islands about 1270; and that
          volunteers went on the same quest nearly twenty times in the next four
          generations before their spasmodic efforts were organised and pressed on to achievement by Henry and his Portuguese (1412-1497).
   (4) Lastly, the renaissance
          of Europe in the crusading age was not only practical but spiritual. Science
          was at last touched and changed by the new life scarcely less than the art of
          war, or the social state of the towns, or the trade of the commercial
          republics. And geography and its kindred were not long in feeling some change,
          though it was very slowly realised and made useful.
          The first notice of the magnet in the West is of about 1180; the use of this by
          sailors is perhaps rightly dated from the thirteenth century and the
          discoveries of Amalphi.
   But to return. We
          must trace more definitely the preparation which has been generally described
          for the work of Prince Henry first in the pilgrim-warriors, and the travellers of the New Age, merchants or preachers or
          sight-seers, who follow out the Eastern land-routes; next in the seamen who
          begin to break the spell of the Western Ocean and to open up the high seas, the
          true high-roads of the world; lastly in the students who most of all, in their
          maps and globes and instruments and theories, are the trainers and masters and
          spiritual ancestors of the Hero of Discovery.
   The first of these
          classes supplied the matter, the attractions and rewards of the exploring
          movement; the others may be said to provide the form by which success was
          reached, genius in seamanship.
               And the one was as
          much needed as the other.
               Human reason did
          its work so well because of a reasonable hope; men crept round Africa in face
          of the Atlantic storms because of the golden East beyond.
               It was as we have
          seen the land travellers of the twelfth and
          thirteenth and fourteenth centuries who laid open that golden East to Europe,
          and added inspiring knowledge to a dream and a tradition. And of these land travellers the first worth notice are Saewulf of Worcester, Adelard of Bath, and Daniel of Kiev,
          three of that host of peaceful pilgrims who followed the conquerors of the
          First Crusade (1096-9). All of these left their recollections and all of them
          are of the new time, in sharp contrast with the hordes of earlier pilgrims,
          even the most recent, like Bishop Ealdred of
          Worcester and York, who crowned William the Conqueror, or Sweyn Godwineson or Thorer Hund, whose
          visits are all mere visits of penitence. Every fresh conversion of the Northern
          nations brought a fresh stream of devotees to Italy and to Syria, a fresh
          revival of the fourth century habit of pilgrimage; but when medieval
          Christendom had been formed, and religious passion was more steady and less
          unworldly, the discoverer and observer blends with the pilgrim in all the
          records left to us.
   Saewulf was a layman and a trader, who went on a pilgrimage (1102), and became a
          monk at the instance of his confessor, Wulfstan,
          Bishop of Worcester. But though his narrative has been called an immense
          advance on all earlier guide-books, it ends with the Holy Land and does not
          touch even the outlying pilgrim sites, in Mesopotamia or Egypt, visited and
          described by Silvia or Fidelis.
   Starting some
          three years after the Latin capture of Jerusalem in 1099, the English traveller takes us up six different routes from Italy to
          Syria, evidence of the vast development of Mediterranean intercourse and of
          practical security against pirates, gained very largely since the second
          millennium began.
   His own way, by Monopoli, Corfu, Corinth, and Athens, took him to Rhodes
  "which once had the Idol called Colossus, one of the Seven Wonders of the
          World, but destroyed by the Persians, with nearly all the land of Roumania, on
          their way to Spain. These were the Colossians to whom St. Paul wrote."
   Thence to Myra in
          Lycia, "the port of the Adriatic as Constantinople is of the Aegean."
   Landing at Jaffa,
          after a sail of thirteen weeks, Saewulf was soon
          among the wonders of Jerusalem, that had not grown less since Arculf’s day. At the head of the Sepulchre Church was the famous Navel of the Earth, "now called Compas,
          which Christ measured with his own hands, working salvation in the midst, as
          say the Psalms." For the same legends were backed by the same texts as in
          the sixth or seventh century.
   Going down to the
          Jordan, “four leagues east of Jericho”, Arabia was seen beyond “hateful to all
          who worship God, but having the Mount whence Elias was carried into Heaven in a
          chariot of fire”.
               Eighteen days’
          journey from the Jordan is Mount Sinai, by way of Hebron, where “Abraham’s Holm
          Oak” was still standing, and where, as pilgrims said, he “sat and ate with God”,
          but Saewulf himself did not go outside Palestine, on
          this side. After travelling through Galilee and noting the House of Saint
          Archi-Triclin (Saint Ruler-of-the-Feast), at Cana, he
          made his way to Byzantium by sea, escaping the Saracen cruisers and weathering
          the storms that wrecked in the roads of Jaffa before his eyes some twenty of
          the pilgrim and merchant fleet then lying at anchor. But not only can we see
          from this how the religious and commercial traffic of the Mediterranean had
          been increased by the Crusades; the main lines of that traffic had been
          changed. Since the Moslem conquest, visitors had mostly come to Palestine
          through Egypt; the Christian conquest of Syria re-opened the direct sea route
          as the conversion of Hungary and north-east Europe had re-opened the direct
          land route one hundred years before (c. 1000-1100). The lines of
          the Danube valley and of the "Roman Sea" were both cleared, and the
          West again poured itself into the East as it had not done since Alexander's
          conquest, since the Oriental reaction had set in about the time of the
          Christian era, rising higher and higher into the full tide of the Persian and
          Arabian revivals of Asiatic Empire.
   Among the varied
          classes of pilgrim-crusaders in Saewulf’s day were
          student-devotees like Adelard and Daniel from the two
          extremes of Christendom, England and Russia, Bath and Kiev; northern sea-kings
          like Sigurd, or Robert of Normandy; even Jewish travellers,
          rabbis, or merchants like Benjamin of Tudela. All
          these, as following in the wake of the First Crusade, and for the most part
          stopping at the high-water mark of its advance, belong to the same group and
          time and impulse as Saewulf himself, and are clearly
          marked off from the great thirteenth century travellers,
          who acted as pioneers of the Western Faith and Empire rather than as
          camp-followers of its armies.
   But except Abbot
          Daniel (c. 1106) and Rabbi Benjamin (c. 1160-73) who
          stand apart, none of our other pilgrim examples of twelfth century exploration
          have anything original or remarkable about them.
   Adelard or Athelard, the countryman of Saewulf and Willibald, is still more the herald of Roger
          Bacon and of Neckam. He is a theorist far more than a traveller, and his journey through Egypt and Arabia (c. 1110-14)
          appears mainly as one of scientific interest. “He sought the causes of all
          things and the mysteries of Nature”, and it was with “a rich spoil of letters”,
          especially of Greek and Arab manuscripts, that he returned to England to
          translate into Latin one of the chief works of Saracen astronomy, the Kharizmian tables. We have already met with him in trying
          to follow the transmission of Greek and Indian geography or world-science
          through the Arabs to Europe and to Christendom.
   Abbot Daniel of
          Kiev in himself is a very ordinary and rather mendacious traveller,
          a harmless, devout pilgrim, as careless in all matters of fact as Antonine the
          Martyr. But, as representing the beginnings of Russian expansion, he is of
          almost unique interest and value. His tract upon the Holy Road is one of the
          first proofs of his people’s interest in the world beyond their steppes, and of
          that nation's readiness and purpose to expand Christian civilisation in the East as the Franks, after breaking through the Western Moslems, were now
          doing. Medieval Russia, Russia before the Tartars, after the Northmen, was now
          a very different thing from the “people fouler than dogs” of the Arab
          explorers. The House of Ruric had guided and organised a nation second to none in Europe, till it had
          fallen into the general lines of Christian development. Jury trial and justices
          in assize it had taken from the West; its church and faith and architecture,
          its manners and morals came to it from the court of the Roman Empire on the
          Bosphorus. Daniel and the other Russians, who passed through that Empire in the
          age of Nestor for trade or for religion, were the vanguard of a great national
          and race expansion that is now just beginning to “bestride the world”.
   In 1022 and 1062
          two monks of Kiev are recorded, out of a crowd of the unknown, as visitors to
          Syria, and about 1106, probably through the news of the Frankish conquest,
          Daniel left his native river, the Snow, in Little Russia, and passed through
          Byzantium and by way of the Archipelago and Cyprus to Jaffa and Jerusalem,
          describing roughly in versts or half-miles the whole distance and that of every
          stage.
               His tone is much
          like Saewulf’s and his mistakes are quite as bad,
          though he tells of “nothing but what was seen with these self-same eyes”. The “Sea
          of Sodom exhales a burning and fetid breath that lays waste all the country, as
          with burning sulphur, for the torments of Hell lie
          under it”. This, however, he did not see; Saracen brigands prevented him, and
          he learnt that “the very smell of the place would make one ill”.
   His measurements
          of distance are all his own. Capernaum is “in the desert, not far from the
          Great Sea (Levant) and eight versts (four miles) from Caesarea”, half the
          distance given in the next chapter as between Acre and Haifa, and less than
          half the breadth of the Sea of Tiberias. The Jordan reminds Daniel of his own
          river, the Snow, especially in its sheets of stagnant water.
               Samaria, or Sebastopol,
          he confuses with Nablous; Bethshan with Bashan; Lydda
          with Ramleh; Caesarea Philippi with the greater Caesarea on the coast. Not far
          from Capernaum and the Jordan is “another large river that comes out of the
          Lake of Gennesaret, and falls into the Sea of Tiberias, passing by a
          large town called Decapolis”. From Mt. Lebanon “six rivers
          flow east into the Lake of Gennesaret and six west towards great Antioch, so
          that this is called Mesopotamia, or the land between the rivers, and Abraham’s
          Haran is between these rivers that feed the Lake of Gennesaret”.
   Daniel has left us
          also an account of his visits to Mar Saba Convent in the Kedron gorge near the
          Dead Sea, to Damascus in the train of Prince Baldwin, and to the Church of the
          Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, to witness the miracle
          of the Holy Fire, noticed by Bernard the Wise, as a sort of counterpart to the
          wonder of Beth-Horon, also retold by Daniel “when the sun stood still while
          Joshua conquered King Og of Bashan”.
   It is not in
          outlook nor in knowledge nor even in the actual ground traversed that these
          later pilgrims shew any advance on the chief of the earlier travellers;
          it is in the new life and movement, in the new hope they give us of greater
          things than these. This is the interest—to us—in King Sigurd of Norway
          (1107-11), a Crusader-Norseman in the new age that owed so much of its very
          life to the Northmen, but who is only to be noticed here as a possible type of
          the explorer-chief—possible, not actual—for his voyage added nothing definite
          to the knowledge or expansion of Christendom. His campaign in Jacob's Land or Gallicia, and his attack on Moslem Lisbon, some forty years
          before it became the head and heart of Portugal, like his exploits in the
          Balearics, shew us a point in the steady decline of western Islam, and so far
          may be called a preparation for Prince Henry's work, but properly as a chapter
          of Portuguese, not of general European, growth.
   There were many
          others like Sigurd,—Robert of Normandy, Godric the
          English pirate, who fought his way through the Saracen fleets with a spear-shaft
          for his banner, Edgar the Aetheling, grandson of
          Edmund Ironside, the Dartmouth fleet of 1147 which retook Lisbon,—but the Latin
          conquest of Syria has now brought us past the Crusades, in the narrower sense,
          to their results, in the exploration of the Further East.
   The first great
          name of this time, of our next main chapter of Preparation, is Benjamin of Tudela, but standing as he does well within the earlier
          age, when the primary interest was the Holy War itself, he is also the last of
          the Palestine travellers—of those Westerns whose real
          horizon was the sacred East of Syria. He is a little before the awakening of
          universal interest in the unknown world, for the Christian Northmen lost with
          the new definiteness of the new faith much of their old infinite unrest and
          fierce inquisitive love of wandering, and their spirit, though related to the
          whole Catholic West by the crusading movement, was not fully realised till the world had been explored and made known,
          till the men of Europe were at home in every country and on every sea.
   Benjamin, as a Jew
          and a rabbi, has the interest of a sectary, and his work was not of a kind that
          would readily win the attention of the Christian world. So the value of his
          travels was hidden till religious divisions had ceased to govern the direction of
          progress. He visited the Jewish communities from Navarre to Bagdad, and
          described those beyond from Bagdad to China, but he wrote for his own people
          and none but they seem to have cared about him. What he discovered (c. 1160-73)
          was for himself and for Judaism, and only his actual place in the twelfth
          century makes him a forerunner of the Polos or of Prince Henry. We may see this
          from his hopeless strangeness and confusion in Rome, like a Frank in Pekin or
          Delhi. “The Church of St. Peter is on the site of the great palace of Julius Caesar,
          near which are eighty Halls of the eighty Kings called Emperors from Tarquin to
          Pepin the father of Charles, who first took Spain from the Saracens.... In the
          outskirts of the city is the palace of Titus, who was deposed by three hundred
          senators for wasting three years over the siege of Jerusalem which he should
          have finished in two”.
   And so on—with the
          “Hall of Galba, three miles round and having a window for each day in the year”,
          with St. John Lateran and its Hebrew trophies, “two copper pillars from the
          temple of Solomon, that sweat at the anniversary of the burning of the Temple”,
          and the “statues of Samson and of Absalom” in the same place. So with Sorrento,
          “built by Hadarezer when he fled before King David”,
          with the old Roman tunnel between Naples and Pozzuoli, “built by Romulus who
          feared David and Joab”, with Apulia, “which is from King  Pul of Assyria”—in all this we have as it were Catholic
          mythology turned inside out, David put into Italy when the West put Trajan at
          the sources of the Nile. It was not likely that writing of this sort would be
          read in the society of the Popes and the Schoolmen, the friars and the
          crusaders, any more than the Buddhist records of missionary travel from China
          one thousand years before. The religious passion which had set the crusaders in
          motion, would keep Catholics as long as it might from the Jews, Turks,
          infidels, and heretics they conquered and among whom they settled.
   But with the final
          loss of Jerusalem by the Latins, and the overthrow of the Bagdad Caliphate by
          the Mongol Tartars (1258), the barrier of fanatic hatred was weakened, and
          Central Asia became an attraction to Christendom instead of a dim horror,
          without form and void, except for Huns and Turks and demons. The Papal court
          sent mission after mission to convert the Tartars, who were wavering, as men
          supposed, between Islam and the Church, and with the first missionaries to the
          House of Ghenghiz went the first Italian merchants
          who opened the court of the Great Khan to Venice and to Genoa.
   As early as 1243
          an Englishman is noticed as living among the Western Horde, the conquerors of
          Russia; but official intercourse begins in 1246 with John de Plano Carpini. This man, a Franciscan of Naples, started in 1245
          as the Legate of Pope Innocent IV to the Tartars, took the northern overland
          route through Germany and Poland, reached Kiev, “the metropolis of Russia”,
          through help of the Duke of Cracow, and at last appeared in the camp of Batou, on the Volga. Hence by the Sea of Aral, “of moderate
          size with many islands”, to the court of Batou’s brother, the Great Khan “Cuyuc” himself, where the
          Christian stranger found himself one of a crowd of four thousand envoys from
          every part of Asia (1246).
   After sixteen
          months Carpini made his way back by the same route, “over
          the plains” and through Kiev, to give at Rome the first genuine account of
          Tartary, in its widest sense, from the Dnieper to China (1247).
   The great rivers
          and lakes and mountains of Russia and Turkestan, the position and distribution
          of the land and its peoples, “even from the Caspian to the Northern Ocean,
          where men are said to have dogs’ faces”, are now first described by an honest
          and clear-headed and keen-eyed observer, neither timid nor credulous.
               Carpini really begins the reliable western map of Further Asia. His personal
          knowledge did not reach China or India, but in his Book of the Tartars,
          Europe was told nearly the whole truth, and almost nothing but the truth, about
          the vast tract and the great races between the Carpathians and the Gobi Desert.
          In the same was included the first fair account of the manners and history of
          the “Mongols whom we call Tartars”, and the simple truthfulness of the Friar
          stands out in all the allusions that make his work so human;—his interviews
          with the Tartar Chiefs and with brother-travellers,
          his dangers and difficulties from Lettish robbers and abandoned or guarded
          ferries, his passage of the Dnieper on the ice, his last three weeks on “trotting”  hacks
          over the steppes.
   We have gone a
          good way from Abbot Daniel, for in John de Plano Carpini Christian Europe has at last a real explorer, a real historian, a genuine man
          of science, in the service of the Church and of discovery.
   Carpini was followed after six years by William de Rubruquis,
          a Fleming sent by St. Louis of France on the same errand of conversion and
          discovery (1253), but by a different route, through the Black Sea, and Cherson,
          over the Don “at the Head of Azov, that divides Europe and Asia, as the Nile
          divides Asia and Africa”, to the great camp on the Volga, “the greatest river I
          had ever seen, which comes from Great Bulgaria in the north and falls into a
          lake (the Caspian Sea), that would take four months to journey round”. Higher
          in their course the Don and the Volga “are not more than ten days' journey
          apart, but diverge as they run south”. The Caspian is “made out of the Volga
          and the rivers that flow into it from Persia”. Thence through the Iron Gates of Derbend, between the Caspian and the Caucasus, “which
          Alexander made to shut the barbarians out of Persia”. Helped by a Nestorian,
          who possessed influence at the Tartar Court, like so many of his Church, Rubruquis reached the “Alps” of the Altai country, where he
          found a small Nestorian lordship, governed like the Papal States, by a priest,
          who was at least one original of the great medieval phantom—Prester John.
   Crossing the great
          steppes of eastern “Tartary”, “like the rolling sea to look at”, Rubruquis at last reached the Mongol headquarters at Caracorum, satisfied on the way that the Caspian had no
          northern outlet, as Strabo and Isidore had imagined. Thence he made his way
          home without much fresh result.
   Though Rubruquis is well called the most brilliant and literary of
          the medieval travellers, his mission was fruitless,
          and the interest of his work lay rather in recording custom and myth—in
          sociology—than in adding anything definite to the geographical knowledge of the
          West. John de Plano had already been over the ground to Caracorum,
          and recorded all the main characteristics of the lands west of the Gobi Desert.
          The further advance, east to China, south to India, was yet to come.
   But while Rubruquis was still among the Tartars, Nicolo and Matteo
          Polo, the uncles of the more famous Marco, were trading (1255-65) to the Crimea
          and the districts of southern Russia that were now under the Western Horde,—and
          soon after, following the caravans to Bokhara, they were drawn on to the court
          of Kublai Khan, then somewhere near the wall of China. After a most friendly
          reception they were sent back to Europe with presents and a letter to Pope
          Clement IV, offering a welcome and maintenance to Christian teachers. Kublai
  "had often questioned the Polos of the Western lands, “and now he asked
          for one hundred Latins, to show him the Christian faith, for Christ he held to
          be the only God”. Furnished with the imperial passport of the Golden Tablet,
          our merchants made their way back to Acre in April, 1269.
   They found the old
          pope dead, Gregory X in his place, and he showed a coolness in answering the
          Khan’s requests, but in 1271 they set out on their second journey to the
          furthest East, taking with them two friar preachers and their nephew Marco, now
          nineteen years of age.
               In Armenia the
          friars took alarm at the troubled state of the nearer East and turned back,
          just as Augustine of Canterbury tried to find a way out of the mission to the
          English that Pope Gregory I. laid upon him in 597. For the Church it was
          perhaps as momentous a time now as then; the thirteenth century, if it had
          ended in the Christianising of the Mongol Empire,
          would have turned the Catholic victory of the fourth and sixth centuries in the
          West, the victory that had been worked out in the next seven hundred years to
          fuller and fuller realisation, into a world
          empire,—which did come at last for European civilisation,
          but not for Christendom.
   The Polos however
          kept on their way north-east for more than "one thousand days," three
          years and a half, till they stood in the presence of Kublai Khan; beyond Gobi
          and the Great Wall and the mountain barriers of China, in Cambaluc or Pekin, “princess encrowned of cities capital”.
   Their journey was
          first through Armenia Lesser and Greater, then through Mosul (Nineveh) to
          Bagdad, where the last Caliph and Pope of the Saracens had been butchered by Holgalu and his Tartars, sewn in a sack and thrown into the
          Tigris by one account, walled up alive by another, in 1258. But though the
          stories in Marco's journal are a main interest of his work, as a summary and
          reflection of the science and history and general culture of the Christian
          world of his time, we must not here look outside his geography. And his first
          place-note of value is on the Caspian, “which containeth in circuit twenty-eight hundred miles and is like a lake, having no union with
          other seas and in which are many islands, cities, and castles”. The extent of
          the Nestorian missions, “through all parts of India and to Cairo and Bagdad,
          and wherever Christians dwell”, strikes him even now at the beginning of his
          travels—much more when he finds their churches on the Hoang Ho and the Yang-Tse-Kiang—declining indeed, but still living to witness to
          the part which that great heresy had played as an intermediary between the
          further and the nearer East—a part which history has never yet worked out.
          Entering Persia as traders, the Polos went naturally to Ormuz, already the
          great mart of Islam for the Indian trade, where Europeans really entered the
          third, and, to them, unknown belt of the world, after passing from a zone of
          known home-land through one of enemies' country, known and only known as such.
          Failing to take the sea route at Ormuz for China, as they had hoped, our
          Italians were obliged to strike back north-east, through Persia and the Pamir,
          the Kashgar district and the Gobi steppes, to Cathay
          and the pleasure domes of Kublai, visiting Caracorum and the Altai country on the way, by a turn due north. In 1275 they were in
          Shang-tu, the Xanadu of Coleridge—the summer capital
          of Kublai Khan—and not till 1292 did they get leave to turn their faces to the
          West once more.
   Here the Polos
          became what may be called consulting engineers to the Mongol Court; Marco was
          even made in 1277 a commissioner of the Imperial Council, and soon after sent
          upon government missions to Yunnan in extreme south-west China and to Yangchow
          city.
               The greater part
          of Marco’s own memoirs is taken up with his account of the thirty-four
          provinces of the Tartar Empire that centred round the
          “six parts of Cathay and the nine parts of Mangi”,
          the districts of northern and southern China as we know them,—an account of the
          roads, rivers, and towns, the trade, the Court and the Imperial Ports, the
          customs and manner of life among the subject peoples in that Empire, perhaps
          the largest ever known. Especially do the travellers dwell on the public roads from Pekin or Cambaluc through all the provinces, the ten thousand Royal inns upon the highways, the
          two hundred thousand horses kept for the public service, the wonderful speed of
          transit in the Great Khan’s embassages, “so that they could go from Pekin to
          the wall of China in two days”.
   But scarcely less
          is said about the great rivers—the arteries of Chinese commerce, even more than
          the caravan routes,—above all, the Yang-Tse-Kiang, “the
          greatest stream in the world, like an arm of the sea, flowing above one hundred
          days’ journey from its source into the ocean, and into which flow countless
          others, making it so great that incredible quantities of merchandise are
          brought by this river. It flows”, exclaims Marco, “through sixteen provinces,
          past the quays of two hundred cities, at one of which I saw at one time five
          thousand vessels, and there are other marts that have more”.
   The breadth and
          depth and length and merchandise of the Pulisangan and the Caramaran are only less than the Kiang's;
          from the point where Marco crossed the second of these, there was not another
          bridge till it reached the ocean, hundreds of miles away, “by reason of its
          exceeding greatness”.
   Lastly Pekin, the
          capital of the Empire, with Quinsai and the other
          provincial capitals of Mangi and Cathay, call out the
          unbounded admiration of the Polos as of every other Western traveller,
          from the Moslem Ibn Batuta to the Christian friars of
          the fourteenth century.
   Pekin, two days’
          journey from the ocean, the residence of the Court in December, January, and
          February, in the extreme north-east of Cathay, had been lately rebuilt in a “central
          square of twenty-four miles in compass, and twelve suburbs, three or four miles
          long, adjoining each of the twelve gates”, where merchants and strangers lived,
          each nation with separate “burses” or store-houses, where they lodged. From
          this centre to the land of Gog and Magog and the
          champaign-land of Bargu, the Great Khan travelled
          every year in midsummer for the fresh air of the plateau country of central
          Asia, as well as for a better view of the great Russian and Bactrian
          sub-kingdoms of his House. The six months of spring and autumn were spent in
          slow progresses through central and southern China to Thibet on one side, and
          to Tonquin on the other. But greater even than Pekin, Quinsai,
          or Kansay, the City of Heaven, in southern China,
          though no longer the capital even of a separate Kingdom of Mangi,
          was the crowning work of Chinese civilisation. It
          surpassed the other cities of Kublai, as much as these overshadowed the Rome or
          Venice of the thirteenth century.
   “In the world
          there is not its like, for by common report it is one
          hundred miles in circuit, with a lake on one side and a river on the other,
          divided in many channels and upon these and the canals adjoining twelve
          thousand bridges of stone; there are ten market places, each half a mile
          square; great store-houses of stone, where the Indian merchants lay by their
          goods; palaces and gardens on both sides of the main street, which, like all
          the highways in Mangi, is paved with stone on each side,
          and in the midst full of gravel, with passages for the water, which keeps it
          always clean”. Salt, silk, fruit, precious stones, and cloth of gold are the
          chief commodities; the paper money of the Great Khan is used everywhere; all
          the people, except a few Nestorians and Moslems, are “idolaters, so luxurious
          and so happy that a man would think himself in Paradise”.
   It was only in
          recent years that Kublai, or his general, Baian, had
          captured Quinsai and driven out the King of Mangi with his seraglio and his friends. The exile till
          then had only thought of pleasure, of wine, women, and song, the “sweet meat
          which cost him the sour sauce ye have heard”, on the approach of danger, had
          fled on board the ships he had prepared to “certain impregnable isles in the
          ocean”, and if these impregnable islands may be identified with Zipangu or
          Japan, the conquerors pursued him even here. There is nothing more interesting
          in Polo's book than his story of the Mongol failure in the Eastern islands,
          fifteen hundred miles from the coast of Mangi, now
          first discovered to Christian knowledge.
   This country of
          Japan, “very great, the people white, of gentle manners, idolaters in religion,
          under a King of their own”, was attacked by Kublai’s fleet in 1264 for the gold
          they had, and had in such plenty that “the King’s house, windows, and floors
          were covered with it, as churches here with lead, as was reported by
          merchants—but these were few and the King allowed no exportation of the gold”.
               The expedition was
          as disastrous a failure as the old Athenian attack upon Sicily, and was not
          repeated, although fleets were sent by the Great Khan after this into the
          Southern Seas, which were supposed to have made a discovery of Papua, if not of
          the Australian Continent. "In this Sea of China, over against Mangi," Marco reported, from hearsay “of mariners and
          expert pilots, are 7440 islands, most of them inhabited, whereon grows no tree
          that yields not a pleasant smell—spices, lignum-aloes, and pepper, black and
          white”. The ships of Zaitum (the great Chinese mart
          for Indian trade) knew this sea and its islands, “for they go every winter and
          return every summer, taking a year on the voyage, and all this though it is far
          from India and not subject to the Great Khan”.
   But not only did
          Polo in these sections of his Guide Book or Memories of Travel, record the main
          features of a coast and ocean scarcely guessed at by Europeans, and flatly
          denied by Ptolemy and the main traditional school of Western geography. In his
          service under Kublai, and in his return by sea to Aden and Suez, he opened up
          the eight provinces of Thibet, the whole of south-east Asia from Canton to
          Bengal, and the great archipelago of further India.
               Four days’ journey
          beyond the Yang-Tse-Kiang, Marco entered “the wide
          country of Thibet, vanquished and wasted by the Khan for the space of twenty
          days’ journey, and become a wilderness wanting inhabitants, where wild beasts
          are excessively increased”. Here he tells us of the Yak-oxen and great Thibetan dogs as great as asses, of the musk deer, and
          spices, “and salt lakes having beds of pearls”, and of the cruel and bestial
          idolatry and social customs of the people.
   Still farther to
          the south-west, Commissioner Polo came to the Cinnamon river, called Brius, on the borders of the province of Caindu, to the porcelain-making districts of Carazan, governed by Kublai's son, and so to Bengal, “which
          borders upon India”, and where Marco laughs at the tattoo customs of “flesh
          embroidery for the dyeing of fools’ skins”.
   Thence back to
          China, the richest and most famous country of all the East, where was “peace so
          absolute that shops could be left open full of wares all night and travellers and strangers could walk day and night through
          every part, untouched and fearing none”.
   But the Polos
          wearied even of the Court favours and their celestial
          home; they longed to come back to earth, to Frankland and Christendom, where
          life was so rough, and poor, and struggling, but for whose sake they had come
          so far and braved so much. But the Khan was hurt at the least hint of their
          wishes, and it was only a fortunate chance that restored them to Europe. Twenty
          years after their outward start, they were dismissed for a time and under
          solemn promise of return, as the guides of an embassy in charge of a Mongol
          bride for a Persian Khan, living at Tabrez and related to Kublai himself. So,
          in 1292, they embarked for India at Zaitum, “one of
          the fairest ports in the world, where is so much pepper that what comes by
          Alexandria to the West is little to it, and, as it were, one of a hundred”.
          Then striking across the Gulf of Cheinan, for fifteen
          hundred miles, and passing “infinite islands, with gold and much trade”,—a gulf
          “seeming in all like another world”—they reached Ziambar and, after another run of the same distance, Java, then supposed by mariners to
          be the greatest island in the world, “above three thousand miles round and
          under a king who pays tribute to none, the Khan himself not offering to subject
          it, because of the length and danger of the voyage”.
   One hundred miles
          south-east the fleet touched at Java the Less “in compass about two thousand
          miles, with abundance of treasure and spices, ebony, and brazil,
          and so far to the south that the North Star cannot be seen, and none of the
          stars of the Great Bear”. Here they were in great fear of “those brutish man
          eaters”, with whom they traded for victuals and camphire and spices and
          precious stones, being forced to stay for five months by stress of weather—till
          they got away into the Bay of Bengal, the extreme point of European knowledge
          until this time, “where there are savages living in the deep sea islands with
          dogs’ heads and teeth, as I was told, all naked, both men and women, and living
          the life of beasts (Andamans)”.
   Sailing hence a
          thousand miles to the west, adds Marco, is Ceylon, “the finest island in the
          world, 2400 miles in circuit, and once 3600, as is seen in old maps, but the
          north winds have made great part of it sea”.
               Again west for
          sixty miles, to Malabar, “which is firm continent in India the Greater”, and
          where the Polos re-entered as it were the horizon of Western knowledge, at the
          shrine of St. Thomas, the Apostle of India.
               Here we must leave
          the Venetians, with only a bare mention of their homeward route from Malabar by Murfili and the Valley of Diamonds, by Camari, where they had a glimpse of the Pole-Star once
          more, and by Guzerat and Cambay to Socotra, where Marco, in his stay, heard and
          wrote down the first news ever brought to Europe of the “great isle Magaster”, or Madagascar, and of Zensibar or Zanzibar.
   Of Polo's account
          of Hindu customs,—self-immolation and especially Suttee, of Caste, of the
          Brahminical “thread with one hundred and four beads by which to pray”; of their
          etiquette in eating, drinking, birth, marriage, and death—only the simple fact
          can be noticed here, that the first serious and direct Christian account of
          India, as of China, is also among the most accurate and well judged, and that
          both in what he says and what he leaves unsaid, Messer Marco is a true
          Herodotus of the Middle Ages.
               But not only does
          his account discover for Europe the extreme east and south of Asia; in his last
          chapter he returns to the Tartars, and after adding a few words on the nomades of the central plains, gives us our first Latin
          account of Siberia, “where are found great white bears, black foxes, and
          sables; and where are great lakes, frozen except for a few months in the year,
          and crossed in sledges by the fur-traders”.
   Beyond this the
          Obscure Land reaches to the furthest North, “near which is Russia, where for
          the most of winter the sun appears not, and the air is thick and dark as
          betimes in the morning with us, where the men are pale and squat and live like
          the beasts, and where on the East men come again to the Ocean Sea and the
          islands of the Falcons”.
               The work of Marco
          Polo is the high-water mark of medieval land travel; the extension of
          Christendom after him was mainly by the paths of the sea; the Roman missions to
          the Tartars and to Malabar, vigorously and stubbornly pressed as they were,
          ended in unrelieved collapse; only by the revolt and resurrection of the
          Russian kingdom did the European world permanently and markedly expand on the
          side of Asia. But a crowd of missionaries followed the first traders to Cathay
          and to Mangi—Friar Odoric,
          John de Monte Corvino, John de Cora; statesmen like Marignolli the Papal Legate, sight-seers like Mandeville followed these; Bishop Jordanus of Capua worked for years in Coulam near Cape Comorin (c. 1325-35); the martyrdom of four friars on
          April 1, 1322, at Tana, in India, became one of the great commemorations of the
          Latin Church; there seemed no cause why Christian missions which had won north
          and north-east Europe should not win central and eastern Asia, whose peoples
          seemed as indifferent, as agnostic, as our own Norse or English pagans.
   “The fame of the
          Latins”, says Jordanus, about 1330—and he is borne
          out by Marino Sanuto—"is greater in India than
          among ourselves. Here our arrival is always looked for, and said to be
          predicted in their books. Once gain Egypt and launch a fleet even of two
          galleys on this sea and the battle is won”. As Egypt could not be gained by
          arms, it was turned by seamanship. Before Polo returned from China, the
          coasting of Africa had begun, and Italian mariners were already in search of
          the longer way to the East.
   But there is no
          work of land travel after that of Messer Marco which really adds anything
          decisive to European knowledge before the fifteenth century; the advance of
          trade intercourse between India and the Italian Republics, the gradual
          liberation of Russia the use made of the caravan routes by some of the most
          active of the Western clergy, are the chief notes of the time between the Polos
          and Prince Henry; and the flimsy fabrications of Mandeville—"of all liars
          that type of the first magnitude”—would be fairly left without a word even in a
          minute history of discovery, if he had not, like Ktesias with Herodotus, won a hearing for himself and drawn men's minds away from the
          truth-telling original that he travestied, by the sheer force of impudence.
   The Indian travels
          of the Italian Nicolo Conti and the Russian merchant Athanasius Nikitin belong
          to a later time, to the age of the Portuguese voyages; they are not part of the
          preparation for our central subject, they are only a somewhat obscure parallel
          to that subject.
               For in the later
          Middle Ages the chief interest lies elsewhere. The expansion of Christendom in
          the fourteenth century, and still more in the fifteenth (Prince Henry's own),
          is the story of the ventures and the successes, not so much of landsmen, as of
          mariners.
               
           IV
              MARITIME EXPLORATION. CIRCA 1250-1410.
              
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