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Voyager from Xanadu: Rabban Sauma and the First Journey from China to the West

Product ID : 46146339


Galleon Product ID 46146339
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About Voyager From Xanadu: Rabban Sauma And The First

Product Description Toward the end of the thirteenth century, at about the time Marco Polo was being received by the great Khubilai Khan, a Nestorian Christian monk from China called Rabban Sauma was making the reverse journey from the Mongol capital (what is now Beijing) to Jerusalem. Upon reaching Baghdad―the first traveler to arrive from China―Sauma learned that his pilgrimage could not be fulfilled because of Islamic control of the Holy Land. In Voyager from Xanadu, Morris Rossabi traces Sauma’s trans-Eurasian travels against the turbulent era of the Mongol Empire and the last Crusades. His indispensable book provides a unique first-hand Asian perspective on Europe and illuminates a crucial period in the early history of global, diplomatic, and commercial networking. Review “Timely. . . . Well-fashioned. . . . A very helpful resource.” ― European Legacy "All along the journey, in Asia, the Middle East and Europe, Rossabi gives us excellent sketches of the political situation, the developments up to the times, and accounts of each place of importance that Sauma visited. This makes a wonderfully lucid outline of a series of events in the late thirteenth century which went far in shaping world politics. Although the book is rich for the detail it provides, it is the coordinated view of the world at the time which puts the work beyond the mere presentation of another ancient text, fascinating as it might be." ― Pacific Affairs "This book is a wonderful resource for the student of world history. It opens a window on a time when relations among various forms of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism in Inner Asia and around the Mediterranean were much more varied and open to change than they became in later centuries." ― Journal of Asian Studies "Rabban Sauma is the first visitor from the Far East who is known to have reached the West, and certainly the first to have left an account of his travels. Rossabi's study places him in context, and will help the reader who has no special knowledge of the political and ecclesiastical history of Asia in the thirteenth century to understand what was happening there and why a hermit from Cathay should have become the ambassador of the Ilkhan of Persia to the rulers of Christendom. Students, and the general reader too, will, I am sure, enjoy this book very much." ― Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society From the Inside Flap The story of Rabban Sauma's journey from Peking to Paris in the late thirteenth century is absorbing in its own right. But by his erudite commentary and fine evocation of context Morris Rossabi has given this adventure a wider scope, one that lets us ponder Marco Polo's travels from a reverse perspective, and thus gain a new focal point from which to start our studies of China and the Western world.Jonathan Spence, author of The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci A wonderful story which Morris Rossabi tells with scholarship and skill.Steven Runciman, author of History of the Crusades Voyager from Xanadu is fascinating reading; I sat down with it and read straight through, unable to put it down. Morris Rossabi draws on all his immense erudition and yet never lets it obscure his sensitive concern with the intensely human character of this story. He importantly illumines lost pages in the history of thirteenth-century Europe and Asia, but in essence this is a triumph of sophisticated, cosmopolitan storytelling. Rabban Sauma lives.Frederick W. Mote, author of The Intellectual Foundations of China This book is a wonderful resource for the student of world history.John E. Wills, Jr., author of Mountain of Fame Voyager from Xanadu is a text no student should miss. It is an engaging account of Nestorian monk Rabban Sauma's trans-Eurasian travels at a crucial period in the early history of global diplomatic and commercial networking. Rossabi's text is always well-researched, highly readable, and guaranteed to intrigue with details of life and attitudes across thirteenth-cen