The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 429 pages of information about The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10.

The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 429 pages of information about The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10.
of bladders.  And when they haue discharged their goods, they sel the rafts for fire, and let the wind out of their goats skins, and cary them home againe vpon their asses by land, to make other voyages downe the riuer.  The building here is most of bricke dried in the Sun, and very litle or no stone is to be found:  their houses are all flat-roofed and low. [Sidenote:  Seldome rain.] They haue no raine for eight moneths together, nor almost any clouds in the skie night nor day.  Their Winter is in Nouember, December, Ianuary and February, which is as warme as our Summer in England in a maner.  This I know by good experience, because my abode at seuerall times in this city of Babylon hath bene at the least the space of two yeeres.  As we come to the city, we passe ouer the riuer of Tigris on a great bridge made with boats chained together with two mighty chaines of yron. [Sidenote:  Eight and twenty dayes iourney more by riuer, from Babylon to Balsara.] From thence we departed in flat bottomed barks more strong and greater then those of Euphrates, and were eight and twenty dayes also in passing downe this riuer to Balsara, but we might haue done it in eighteene or less, if the water had bene higher.  Vpon the waters side stand by the way diuer townes resembling much the names of the olde prophets:  the first towne they call Ozeah, and another Zecchiah.  Before we come to Balsara by one dayes iourney, the two riuers of Tigris and Euphrates meet, and there standeth a castle called Curna, kept by the Turks, where all marchants pay a small custome.  Here the two riuers ioyned together begin to be eight or nine miles broad:  here also it beginneth to ebbe and flow, and the water ouerflowing maketh the countrey all about very fertile of corne, rice, pulse, and dates.  The towne of Balsara is a mile and an halfe in circuit:  all the buildings, castle and wals, are made of bricke, dried in the Sun.  The Turke hath here fiue hundred Ianisaries, besides other souldiers continually in garison and pay, but his chiefe strength is of gallies which are about fiue and twenty or thirty very faire and furnished with goodly ordinance.  To this port of Balsara come monethly diuers ships from Ormuz, laden with all sorts of Indian marchandise, as spices, drugs, Indico and Calecut cloth.  These ships are vsually from forty to threescore tunnes, hauing their planks sowed together with corde made of the barke of Date trees, and in stead of Occam they vse the shiuerings of the barke of the sayd trees, and of the same they also make their tackling. [Sidenote:  Ships made without yron in the Persian gulfe.] They haue no kind of yron worke belonging to these vessels, saue only their ankers.  From this place six dayes sailing downe the gulfe, they goe to a place called Baharem in the mid way to Ormus:  there they fish for pearles foure moneths in the yeere, to wit, in Iune, Iuly, August, and September. [Sidenote:  Zelabdim Echebar king of Cambaia.] My abode in Balsara was iust sixe
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The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 10 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.