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T h e A r t i o s H o m e C o m p a n i o n S e r i e s T e a c h e r O v e r v i e w THE THIRTEENTH century saw the beginnings of European exploration with the travels of the Polo family. In the middle of the century, merchant brothers Niccolò and Maffeo set out from Venice to explore the legendary land called Cathay. Establishing trading posts along the way, the brothers traveled all the way to the city of Peking, the capital of China, where they met the great Kublai Khan. Sent back as envoys from the Khan with a message to the Pope, the brothers returned to Venice, where they were joined by Niccolò s son Marco for their second, even grander journey through Central Asia. During this journey Marco spent time in the service of the Khan in the Far East, allowing the young Venetian to explore lands including China, Japan, and Tibet, from Canton to Bengal, as well as the archipelago of India. Much was gained from Marco Polo s interaction with the Far East in the areas of culture, government, and communication. The caravan of Marco Polo traveling to India Page 257

Reading and Assignments In this unit, students will: Complete one lesson in which they will learn about Marco Polo, journaling and answering discussion questions as they read. Visit www.artioshcs.com for additional resources. Leading Ideas God orders all things for the ultimate good of His people. And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28 The diligence to keeping faith is a revelation of an individual s character. Speak the truth to one another; render in your gates judgments that are true and make for peace. Zechariah 8:16 Key People, Places, and Events Niccolò and Maffeo Polo Kublai Khan Marco Polo Believers are called to set a good example for others. Let no one despise you for your youth, but set the believers an example in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith, in purity. 1 Timothy 4:12 Map of the Travels of Marco Polo (By Asie.svg: historicair 20:31, 20 November 2006 (UTC)derivative work: Classical geographer (talk) - Background map is Asie.svg, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8297839) Page 258

L e s s o n O n e H i s t o r y O v e r v i e w a n d A s s i g n m e n t s Marco Polo And now I will tell you all its nobleness, says Marco, for without doubt it is the largest city in the world. The city is one hundred miles in circumference and has twelve thousand stone bridges, and beneath the greater part of these a large ship might pass. And you need not wonder there are so many bridges, because the city is wholly on the water and surrounded by it like Venice. The merchants are so numerous and so rich that their wealth can neither be told nor believed. They and their ladies do nothing with their own hands, but live as delicately as if they were kings. These females also are of most angelic beauty, and live in the most elegant manner. Marco Polo, as quoted by M.B. Synge Reading and Assignments Review the discussion questions and vocabulary, then read the article: Marco Polo. Narrate about today s reading using the appropriate notebook page. Be sure to answer the discussion questions and include key people, events, and dates within the narration. Be sure to visit www.artioshcs.com for additional resources. Key People, Places, and Events Niccolò and Maffeo Polo Kublai Khan Marco Polo Marco Polo in a Russian Tatar suit Page 259

Discussion Questions 1. What did Kublai Khan ask the Polo brothers to relay to the Pope? 2. What first ignited Marco Polo s interest in the Far East? 3. Who made the journey back to the Far East to return to Kublai Khan? 4. Describe their journey. 5. What poet wrote what poem describing the kingdom of Kublai Khan? 6. Describe the city of Peking in detail, and compare it to the typical European city at that time? 7. Describe the city of Hangzhou in detail, and compare it to the typical European city at that time. 8. Describe the method of communication that Kublai Khan had established between his government and the people in his provinces. 9. List the lands that Marco Polo explored while in the service of Kublai Khan. Probable view of Marco Polo s own geography, from The Book of Ser Marco Polo Page 260

Adapted for Middle School from the book: A Book of Discovery by M.B. Synge Marco Polo Venice during the time of the Middle Ages was full of enterprising merchants merchants such as those we hear of in Shakespeare s Merchant of Venice. Among these were two actual Venetians, the brothers Polo. Rumors had reached them of the wealth of the mysterious land of Cathay (known today as China), of the Great Khan, of Europeans making their way through barren wildernesses, across burning deserts in the face of hardships indescribable, to open up a highway to the Far East. delayed by heavy snows, now by the swelling of unbridged rivers, so that it was a year before they reached Peking (now called Beijing), which they considered was the extremity of the East. They were courteously received by the Great Kublai Khan, who questioned them closely about their own land, to which they replied in the Tatar language which they had learned on the way. The Khan wished to send messengers to the Pope to beg him to send a hundred wise men to teach the Chinese Christianity. He chose the Polo brothers as his envoys, and accordingly they started off to fulfill his request. After an absence of fifteen years they again reached Venice. The very year they had left home Niccolò s wife had died, and his boy, afterwards to become the famous traveler Marco Polo, had been born. The boy was now fifteen. Niccolò and Maffeo in Bukhara, where they stayed for three years. They were invited by an envoy of Hulagu (right) to travel east to visit Kublai Khan So off started Niccolò and Maffeo Polo on a trading enterprise, and, having crossed the Mediterranean, came with a fair wind and the blessing of God to Constantinople, where they disposed of a large quantity of their merchandise. Having made some money, they directed their way to Bokhara, where they fell in with a Tatar nobleman who persuaded them to accompany him to the Court of the Great Khan himself. Ready for adventure, they agreed, and he led them in a northeasterly direction; now they were How the brothers Polo set out from Constantinople with their nephew Marco for China, from a miniature painting in the fourteenth century Livre des Merveilles Page 261

The stories told by his father and uncle of the Far East and the Court of the greatest emperor on earth filled the boy with enthusiasm, and when in 1271 the brothers Polo set out for their second journey to China, not only were they accompanied by the young Marco, but also by two preaching friars to teach the Christian faith to Kublai Khan. Their journey lay through Armenia, through the old city of Nineveh to Bagdad, where the last caliph had been butchered by the Tatars. Entering Persia as traders, the Polo family passed on to Hormuz, hoping to take ship from there to China. But, for some unknown reason, this was impossible, and the travelers made their way northeastward to the country near the sources of the river Oxus. Here young Marco fell sick with malaria, and for a whole year they could not proceed. from the Khan, who had heard of their approach. It was not till May 1275 that they actually reached the Court of Kublai Khan after their tremendous journey of one thousand days. The preaching friars had long since turned homeward, alarmed at the dangers of the way, so only the three stout-hearted Polos were left to deliver the Pope s message to the ruler of the Mongol Empire. The lord of all the earth, as he was called by his people, received them very warmly. He inquired at once who the young man with them was. My lord, replied Niccolò, he is my son and your servant. Then, said the Khan, he is welcome. I am much pleased with him. So the three Venetians abode at the Court of Kublai Khan. His summer palace was at Shang-tu, called Xanadu by the poet Coleridge In Xanadu did Kubla Khan A stately pleasure-dome decree: Where Alph, the sacred river, ran Through caverns measureless to man Down to a sunless sea. Marco Polo lands at Ormuz, from a miniature in the Livre des Merveilles Resuming their journey at last in high spirits, they crossed the great highlands of the Pamirs, known as the roof of the world, and, descending on Hotan, found themselves face to face with the great Gobi Desert. For thirty days they journeyed over the sandy wastes of the silent wilderness, till they came to a city in the province of Tangut, where they were met by messengers So twice five miles of fertile ground With walls and towers were girdled round; And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills, Where blossomed many an incensebearing tree; And here were forests ancient as the hills, Enfolding sunny spots of greenery. So the three Venetians abode at the court of the Chinese emperor for no less Page 262

than seventeen years. Young Marco displayed such great intelligence that he was sent on a mission for the Khan some six months journey distant; and so well did he describe the things he had seen and the lands through which he had passed, that the Khan heaped on him honors and riches. Let us hear what Marco says of his lord and master: The Great Khan, lord of lords, named Kublai, is of middle stature, neither too full nor too short: he has a beautiful fresh complexion, his color is fair, his eyes dark. Kublai Khan, as he would have appeared in the 1260s The capital of the empire, Peking, two days journey from the sea, and the residence of the court during the months of December, January, and February, called out the unbounded enthusiasm of the Polos. The city, in the extreme northeast of Cathay, had been newly rebuilt in a regular square, six miles on each side, surrounded by walls of earth and having twelve gates. The streets are so broad and so straight, said Marco, that from one gate another is visible. It contains many beautiful houses and palaces, and a very large one in the midst, containing a steeple with a large bell which at night sounds three times, after which no man must leave the city. At each gate a thousand men keep guard, not from dread of any enemy, but in reverence of the monarch who dwells within it, and to prevent injury by robbers. This square form of Peking, the great breadth of the straight streets, the closing of the gates by sound of a bell the largest in the world is noted by all travelers to this far-eastern city of Cathay. But greater even than Peking was the city of Hangzhou, the City of Heaven, in the south of China. It had but lately fallen into the hands of Kublai Khan. And now I will tell you all its nobleness, says Marco, for without doubt it is the largest city in the world. The city is one hundred miles in circumference and has twelve thousand stone bridges, and beneath the greater part of these a large ship might pass. And you need not wonder there are so many bridges, because the city is wholly on the water and surrounded by it like Venice. The merchants are so numerous and so rich that their wealth can neither be told nor believed. They and their ladies do nothing with their own hands, but live as delicately as if they were kings. These females also are of most angelic beauty and live in the most elegant manner. The people are idolaters, subject to the Great Khan, and use paper money. They eat the flesh of dogs and other beasts, such as no Christian would touch for the world. In this city, too, are four thousand baths, in which the citizens, both men and women, take great delight and frequently resort thither, because they keep their persons very clean. They are the largest and most beautiful baths in the world, insomuch that one hundred of either sex may bathe in them at Page 263

once. Twenty-five miles from thence is the ocean, and there is a city (Ningbo) which has a very fine port, with large ships and much merchandise of immense value from India and other quarters. But though Marco revels in the description of wonderful cities, he is continually leading us back to the Great Khan himself. His festivals were splendid. The tables were arranged so that the Emperor sat higher than all the others, always with his face to the south. His sons and daughters were placed so that their heads were on a level with his feet. Some forty thousand people feast on these occasions, but the Khan himself is served only by his great barons, their mouths wrapped in rich towels embroidered in gold and silver, that their breath might not blow upon the plates. His presents were on a colossal scale; it was no rare occurrence for him to receive five thousand camels, one hundred thousand beautiful horses, and five thousand elephants covered with cloth of gold and silver. And now I will relate a wonderful thing, says Marco. A large lion is led into his presence, which, as soon as it sees him, drops down and makes a sign of deep humility, owning him its lord and moving about without any chain. His kingdom was ruled by twelve barons all living at Peking. His provinces numbered thirty-four, hence their method of communication was very complete. Messengers are sent to diverse provinces, says Marco, and on all the roads they find at every twenty-five miles a post, where the messengers are received. At each is a large edifice containing a bed covered with silk and everything useful and convenient for a traveler... here, too, they find full four hundred horses, whom the prince has ordered to be always in waiting to convey them along the principal roads... Thus they go through the provinces, finding everywhere inns and horses for their reception. Moreover, in the intervals between these stations, at every three miles are erected villages of about forty houses inhabited by foot-runners also employed on these dispatches. They wear large girdles set round with bells, which are heard at a great distance. Receiving a letter or packet, one runs full speed to the next village, when his approach being announced by bells, another is ready to start and proceed to the next, and so on. By these pedestrian messengers the Khan receives news in one day and night from places ten days journey distant; in two days from those twenty off, and in ten from those a hundred days journey distant. Thus he sends his messengers through all his kingdoms and provinces to know if any of his subjects have had their crops injured through bad weather; and, if any such injury has happened, he does not exact from them any tribute for that season nay, he gives them corn out of his own stores to subsist on. Painting of Kublai Khan on a hunting expedition, by Chinese court artist Liu Guandao Page 264

This first European account of China is all so delightful that it is difficult to know where to stop. The mention of coal is interesting. Throughout the whole province of Cathay, says Marco, are a kind of black stones cut from the mountains in veins, which burn like logs. They maintain the fire better than wood. If you put them on in the evening they will preserve it the whole night, and it will be found burning in the morning. Throughout the whole of Cathay this fuel is used. They have also wood, but the stones are much less expensive. Neither can we pass over Marco s account of the wonderful stone bridge with its twenty-four arches of pure marble across the broad river, the most magnificent object in the whole world, across which ten horsemen could ride abreast, or the Yellow River (the Yangtze), so large and broad that it cannot be crossed by a bridge, and flows on even to the ocean, or the wealth of mulberry trees throughout the land, on which lived the silkworms that have made China so famous for her silk. Then there is their manufacture of fine porcelain ware. Great quantities of porcelain earth were here collected into heaps and in this way exposed to the action of the atmosphere for some forty years, during which time it was never disturbed. By this process it became refined and fitted for manufacture. Such is Marco s only allusion to china ware. With regard to tea he is entirely silent. But he is the first European to tell us about the islands of Japan, fifteen hundred miles from the coast of China, now first discovered to the geographers of the West. Cipangu, says Marco, is an island situated at a distance from the mainland. The people are fair and civilized in their manners they possess precious metals in extraordinary abundance. The people are white, of gentle manners, idolaters in religion under a king of their own. These folk were attacked by the fleet of Kublai Khan in 1264 for their gold, for the King s house, windows, and floors were covered with it, but the King allowed no exportation of it. From the Book The Travels of Marco Polo ( Il milione ) Thus Marco Polo records in dim outline the existence of land beyond that ever dreamed of by Europeans indeed, denied by Ptolemy and other geographers of the West. In the course of his service under Kublai Khan, he opened up the eight provinces of Tibet, the whole of Southeast Asia from Canton to Bengal, and the archipelago of farther India. He tells us, too, of Tibet, that wide country vanquished and wasted by the Khan for the space of twenty days journey a great wilderness wanting people, but overrun by wild beasts. Here were great Tibetan dogs as large as donkeys. Still on duty for Kublai Khan, Marco reached Bengal, which borders upon India. But he was glad enough to return to his adopted Chinese home, the richest and most famous country of all the East. At last the Polo family wearied of court honors, and they were anxious to return to Page 265

their own people at Venice. However, the Khan was very unwilling to let them go. One day their chance came. The Persian ruler was anxious to marry a princess of the house of Kublai Khan, and it was decided to send the lady by sea under the protection of the trusted Polos, rather than to allow her to undergo the hardships of an overland journey from China to Persia. So in the year 1292 they bade farewell to the great Kublai Khan, and with the little princess of seventeen and her suite they set sail with an escort of fourteen ships for India. Passing many islands with gold and much trade, after three months at sea they reached Java, at this time supposed to be the greatest island in the world, above three thousand miles round. At Sumatra they were detained five months by stress of weather, till at last they reached the Bay of Bengal. Sailing on a thousand miles westwards, they reached Ceylon the finest island in the world, remarks Marco. It was not till two years after their start and the loss of six hundred sailors that they arrived at their destination, only to find that the ruler of Persia was dead. However, they gave the little bride to his son and passed on by Constantinople to Venice, where they arrived in 1295. And now follows a strange sequel to the story. After their long absence, and in their travel-stained garments, their friends and relations could not recognize them, and in vain did they declare that they were indeed the Polos father, son, and uncle who had left Venice twenty-four long years ago. It was no use; no one believed their story. So this is what they did. They arranged for a great banquet to be held, to which they invited all their relations and friends. This they attended in robes of crimson satin. Then suddenly Marco rose from the table and, going out of the room, returned with the three coarse, travel-stained garments. They ripped open seams, tore out the lining, and a quantity of precious stones, rubies, sapphires, diamonds, and emeralds poured forth. The company was filled with wonder; and when the story spread, all the people of Venice came forth to do honor to their famous fellow-countrymen. Marco was surnamed Marco of the Millions, and never tired of telling the wonderful stories of Kublai Khan, the great emperor who combined the rude magnificence of the desert with the pomp and elegance of the most civilized empire in the Old World. The Polos were not the first Europeans to explore Asia, but Marco was the first to leave writings about his experiences. He did not write them himself, but dictated them to a fellow prisoner, named Rustichello da Pisa, while captured during a war between Venice and Genoa. If not for da Pisa s industrious efforts, we probably wouldn t have these wondrous accounts of the Polo family s travels today. Bust of Marco Polo by Augusto Gamba (Di Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38574316) Page 266