The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,335 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2.

The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,335 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2.

The alleged Marco Polo Lo-han bears the number 100, and his name is Shan-chu tsun-che (tsun-che being a translation of Sanskrit arya, “holy, reverend").  The name Shan-chu evidently represents the rendering of a Sanskrit name, and does not suggest a European name.  The illustration here reproduced is Lo-han No. 100 from a series of stone-engravings in the temple T’ien-ning on the West Lake near Hang Chau.  It will be noticed that it agrees very well with the statue figured by M. Cordier.  In every respect it bears the features of an Indian Lo-han, with one exception, and this is the curious hat.  This, in fact, is the only Lo-han among the five hundred that is equipped with a headgear; and the hat, as is well known, is not found in India.  This hat must represent a more or less arbitrary addition of the Chinese artist who created the group, and it is this hat which led to the speculations regarding the Portuguese sailor or Marco Polo.  Certain it is also that such a type of hat does not occur in China; but it seems idle to speculate as to its origin, as long as we have no positive information on the intentions of the artist.  The striped mantle of the Lo-han is by no means singular, for it occurs with seventeen others.  The facts simply amount to this, that the figure in question does not represent a Portuguese sailor or Marco Polo or any other European, but solely an Indian Lo-han (Arhat), while the peculiar hat remains to be explained.

Introduction, p. 92.

THIBAUT DE CHEPOY.

Thibaut de Chepoy (Chepoy, canton of Breteuil, Oise), son of the knight Jean de Chepoy, was one of the chief captains of King Philip the Fair.  He entered the king’s service in 1285 as squire and valet; went subsequently to Robert d’Artois, who placed him in charge of the castle of Saint Omer, and took him, in 1296, to Gascony to fight the English.  He was afterwards grand master of the cross-bow men.  He then entered the service of Charles de Valois, brother of Philip the Fair, who sent him to Constantinople to support the claims to the throne of his wife, Catherine of Courtenay.  Thibaut left Paris on the 9th Sept., 1306, passed through Venice, where he met Marco Polo who gave him a copy of his manuscript.  Thibaut died between 22nd May, 1311, and 22nd March, 1312. (See Joseph PETIT, in Le Moyen Age, Paris, 1897, pp. 224-239.)

THE BOOK OF MARCO POLO.

PROLOGUE

II., p. 6.

SARAI.

“Cordier (Yule) identifiziert den von Pegolotti gewaehlten Namen Saeracanco mit dem juengeren Sarai oder Zarew (dem Sarai grande Fra Mauros), was mir vollkommen untunlich erscheint; es waere dann die Route des Reisenden geradezu ein Zickzackweg gewesen, der durch nichts zu rechtfertigen waere.”  (Dr. Ed. FRIEDMANN, Pegolotti, p. 14.)

Prof.  Pelliot writes to me:  “Il n’y a aucune possibilite de retrouver dans Saracanco, Sarai + Kunk.  Le mot Kunk n’est pas autrement atteste, et la construction mongole ou turque exigerait kunk-sarai.”

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The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.