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Marco Polo and his travels over the Silk Roads

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The Silk Road was a trade route for precious silk, but not only silk. It became an East-West network of inter-­con­necting routes linking Central Asian Kingdoms (eg Bukhara, Samarkand, Bishkek and Islamabad) in the west with major China cit­ies; especially the Han and Tang dynasty capital, Changan (modern day Xian) in the east.

It was rare for individual traders to cover the whole length of the Silk Road. When each trader arrived at his region’s limit, he sold the goods ac­ross his border. Thus as the goods moved westwards from China, Chinese traders would sell to Central Asians, then to Pers­ians, to Syrians, to the Greeks and Jews, and finally to the Italians.

Marco Polo mosaic,
by Francesco de' Rossi

Ducal Palace,  Genoa

The volume of goods traded along the Silk Road increased during the Tang dynasty (618-907), in both directions. The Chin­ese imported gold, gems, per­­fumes, dyes, textiles, ivory and glass, and exported furs, ceram­ics, spices, jade, silk, bronze and lacquer art pieces, iron. The world modern­ised as the result of the increased trade and communication. In the later C13th, under Kublai Khan’s rule, China’s silk industry reached a great soph­is­ticat­ion and guild-regulation and China’s cities became thriving commercial centres.

East-West economic exchanges required big ware­houses in the trading cities, linked by camel caravans. Businessmen travelling along the road usually spoke Chinese, Persian, Turkish or Arabic, depending on which cities they con­ducted their business in. The men slept in caravanserais/roadside inns where their camels were rested and fed, and the goods kept in secure lockups.

Two noble brothers Nicc­olo (1230–c1294) and Maffeo (1231–c1309) Polohad established a trading outpost in Venice. In 1260 these two mer­chants arrived in the Crimea, trading near the Volga river for a year. But then they were caught up in a local civil war, and needed to move, ending up staying for 3 years in Bukhara. The maroon­ed Polo broth­ers were rescued by the Mongol ambass­ador, then left Buk­hara via Samarkand, Kash­gar, travelled around the Gobi desert via Tur­fan and Hami, to Dun­huang. And ended up in Bejing, the new capital of the Great Khan in 1266.

The Silk Road Foundation says that Kublai Khan was very hospitable. He had set up his court at beautiful Beij­ing, after the Mongols took over China in 1264 and estab­lished Yuan dyn­asty (1264-1368). Nicc­olo and Matteo, who spoke some Turkic dial­­ects in the Stans, were well rec­eived in the Great Khan's capital.

Marco Polo (1254–1324) grew up in Venice. He only 6 when his mother died, and his father and uncle set out eastward on their first trip to Cathay/China. Meanwhile Marco was becoming well educated, in theology and languages.
 
merchants' caravanserai
Isfahan Iran

In 1271, the Polos once more set out from Ven­ice... and they took 17-year-old Marco with them. This time the Polos’ caravan trav­elled to the western shores of the Caspian Sea, reaching Tabriz and making their way south to the Persian Gulf. They intended to take sea route to the Chin­ese port but, finding the ships too flimsy, they decided to go overland to Cath­ay.

The Great Khan knew they were coming, sending out a royal escort to bring the travel­lers to court. In May 1275 the Polos arrived at the Khan’s summer residence in his capital, Beijing, 3.5 years after leaving Venice.

In Cathay, Marco had many conversat­ions with Kublai and learned a great deal about Mongolia. He spoke 4 lang­uages well, became a fav­ourite with the Khan and was appointed to high posts in his admin­istrat­ion in China, Burma and India. Marco wrote at length des­cribing the capital, hunting,  ceremonies and public assist­ance. The summer palace’s walls were covered with gold and silver, he said; the Hall could feed 6,000 people and the stables had 10,000 perfect white horses. 

China under the Mongol Empire dynasty was a huge empire whose internal economy dwarfed that of Europe. Iron manufacture was much bigger than Europe, as was salt production. A canal-based transport Asystem linked China's huge cities and markets had well developed paper money.

Kublai Khan appointed Marco as an official of the Privy Council in 1277 and for 3 years he was a tax inspector in Yanzhou. Meanwhile his father and uncle took part in a military campaign, designed and constructed siege eng­in­es.

The Polos stayed in Khan's court for 17 years, acquiring great wealth in jewels/gold. And they travelled to Hangzhou, a city with beautiful lakes and many canals, like Venice. Eventually they were anxious to get going since they feared that if elderly Kublai died, they might not be able to get their fortune out.

On the journey home, the sea journey took 2 years during which 600 passengers and crew died - scurvy, cholera or pirate attacks? This dreadful sea voyage passed through the South China Sea to Sumatra and the Indian Ocean, and finally docked at Hormuz. From the Black Sea coast the three men went by sea, via Constant­inople to Venice, arriving in 1295.

main silk routes
press on H for Hangzhou

3 years after Marco returned to Venice, he commanded a galley in a war against the rival city of Genoa. He was captured during the fighting and spent a year in a Genoese prison, alongside a writer of romances, Rustichello of Pisa. Only when prompted by Rustichello did Marco Polo dictate his stories. His book was written in Old French, a language Polo did ­not speak.

Marco’s journey in Asia had lasted 24 years and reach­ed fur­th­er than any of his predecessors. His main interests seem to have been with the Mon­gol rul­ers of China and with the Muslim merchant comm­unity. Much of the book’s material can be verified against Chinese and Persian rec­ords, but some gave a fanciful pic­ture of life along the Silk Road. The book was translated into many Eur­opean language­es, in English as The Travels of Marco Polo. It became one of the most popular books in med­ieval Europe, with great imp­act on contemporary Eur­ope and on further exploration.

Anyhow in 1299 a peace was concluded between Venice and Genoa, and after a year of captivity, Marco was released freed and returned to Venice. He married, had children and remained in Venice until his death in 1324, aged 70. Even then, Marco still owned brocades of silk and gold!







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