The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1 by Marco Polo and da Pisa Rusticiano
CHAPTER II.
3161 words | Chapter 227
HOW THE TWO BROTHERS WENT ON BEYOND SOLDAIA.
Having stayed a while at Soldaia, they considered the matter, and
thought it well to extend their journey further. So they set forth from
Soldaia and travelled till they came to the Court of a certain Tartar
Prince, BARCA KAAN by name, whose residences were at SARA{1} and at
BOLGARA [and who was esteemed one of the most liberal and courteous
Princes that ever was among the Tartars.]{2} This Barca was delighted
at the arrival of the Two Brothers, and treated them with great honour;
so they presented to him the whole of the jewels that they had brought
with them. The Prince was highly pleased with these, and accepted the
offering most graciously, causing the Brothers to receive at least
twice its value.
After they had spent a twelvemonth at the court of this Prince there
broke out a great war between Barca and Aláu, the Lord of the Tartars
of the Levant, and great hosts were mustered on either side.{3}
[Illustration: Map to illustrate the Geographical Position of the CITY
of SARAI
Part of the Remains of the CITY of SARAI near TZAREV North of the
AKHTUBA Branch of the VOLGA
Lit. Frauenfelder, Palermo]
But in the end Barca, the Lord of the Tartars of the Ponent, was
defeated, though on both sides there was great slaughter. And by reason
of this war no one could travel without peril of being taken; thus it
was at least on the road by which the Brothers had come, though there
was no obstacle to their travelling forward. So the Brothers, finding
they could not retrace their steps, determined to go forward. Quitting
Bolgara, therefore, they proceeded to a city called UCACA, which was at
the extremity of the kingdom of the Lord of the Ponent;{4} and thence
departing again, and passing the great River Tigris, they travelled
across a Desert which extended for seventeen days’ journey, and wherein
they found neither town nor village, falling in only with the tents of
Tartars occupied with their cattle at pasture.{5}
NOTE 1.—✛ Barka Khan, third son of Jújí, the first-born of
Chinghiz, ruled the _Ulús_ of Juji and Empire of Kipchak (Southern
Russia) from 1257 to 1265. He was the first Musulman sovereign of
his race. His chief residence was at SARAI (Sara of the text), a
city founded by his brother and predecessor Bátú, on the banks of
the Akhtuba branch of the Volga. In the next century Ibn Batuta
describes Sarai as a very handsome and populous city, so large that
it made half a day’s journey to ride through it. The inhabitants
were Mongols, Aás (or Alans), Kipchaks, Circassians, Russians, and
Greeks, besides the foreign Moslem merchants, who had a walled
quarter. Another Mahomedan traveller of the same century says the
city itself was not walled, but, “The Khan’s Palace was a great
edifice surmounted by a golden crescent weighing two _kantars_ of
Egypt, and encompassed by a wall flanked with towers,” etc. Pope
John XXII., on the 26th February 1322, defined the limits of the
new Bishopric of Kaffa, which were Sarai to the east and Varna to
the west.
Sarai became the seat of both a Latin and a Russian metropolitan,
and of more than one Franciscan convent. It was destroyed by Timur
on his second invasion of Kipchak (1395–6), and extinguished by the
Russians a century later. It is the scene of Chaucer’s half-told
tale of Cambuscan:—
“At _Sarra_, in the Londe of Tartarie,
There dwelt a King that werriëd Russie.”
[“_Mesalek-al-absar_ (285, 287), says Sarai, meaning ‘the Palace,’
was founded by Bereké, brother of Batu. It stood in a salty plain,
and was without walls, though the palace had walls flanked by
towers. The town was large, had markets, _madrasas_—and baths. It
is usually identified with Selitrennoyé Gorodok, about 70 miles
above Astrakhan.” (_Rockhill, Rubruck_, p. 260, note.)—H. C.]
Several sites exhibiting extensive ruins near the banks of the
Akhtuba have been identified with Sarai; two in particular.
One of these is not far from the great elbow of the Volga at
Tzaritzyn: the other much lower down, at Selitrennoyé Gorodok or
Saltpetre-Town, not far above Astrakhan.
The upper site exhibits by far the most extensive traces of
former population, and is declared unhesitatingly to be the sole
site of Sarai by M. Gregorieff, who carried on excavations among
the remains for four years, though with what precise results I
have not been able to learn. The most dense part of the remains,
consisting of mounds and earth-works, traces of walls, buildings,
cisterns, dams, and innumerable canals, extends for about 7½ miles
in the vicinity of the town of Tzarev, but a tract of 66 miles in
length and 300 miles in circuit, commencing from near the head
of the Akhtuba, presents remains of like character, though of
less density, marking the ground occupied by the villages which
encircled the capital. About 2½ miles to the N.W. of Tzarev a vast
mass of such remains, surrounded by the traces of a brick rampart,
points out the presumable position of the Imperial Palace.
M. Gregorieff appears to admit no alternative. Yet it seems certain
that the indications of Abulfeda, Pegolotti, and others, with
regard to the position of the capital in the early part of the 14th
century, are not consistent with a site so far from the Caspian.
Moreover, F. H. Müller states that the site near Tzarev is known
to the Tartars as the “Sarai of Janibek Khan” (1341–1357). Now it
is worthy of note that in the coinage of Janibek we repeatedly
find as the place of mintage, _New Sarai_. Arabsháh in his History
of Timur states that 63 years had elapsed from the foundation to
the destruction of Sarai. But it must have been at least 140 years
since the foundation of Batu’s city. Is it not possible, therefore,
that both the sites which we have mentioned were successively
occupied by the Mongol capital; that the original Sarai of Batu was
at Selitrennoyé Gorodok, and that the _New Sarai_ of Janibek was
established by him, or by his father Uzbeg in his latter days, on
the upper Akhtuba? Pegolotti having carried his merchant from Tana
(Azov) to Gittarchan (Astrakhan), takes him _one day_ by river to
Sara, and from Sara to _Saracanco_, also by river, eight days more.
(_Cathay_, p. 287.) In the work quoted I have taken Saracanco for
Saraichik, on the Yaik. But it was possibly the Upper or New Sarai
on the Akhtuba. Ibn Batuta, marching on the frozen river, reached
Sarai in three days from Astrakhan. This could not have been at
Tzarev, 200 miles off.
In corroboration (_quantum valeat_) of my suggestion that there
must have been two Sarais near the Volga, Professor Bruun of Odessa
points to the fact that Fra Mauro’s map presents _two_ cities of
Sarai on the Akhtuba; only the Sarai of Janibeg is with him no
longer _New_ Sarai, but _Great_ Sarai.
The use of the latter name suggests the possibility that in the
_Saracanco_ of Pegolotti the latter half of the name may be the
Mongol _Kúnḳ_ “Great.” (See _Pavet de Courteille_, p. 439.)
Professor Bruun also draws attention to the impossibility of Ibn
Batuta’s travelling from Astrakhan to Tzarev in three days, an
argument which had already occurred to me and been inserted above.
[The Empire of Kipchak founded after the Mongol Conquest of 1224,
included also parts of Siberia and Khwarizm; it survived nominally
until 1502.—H. C.]
(_Four Years of Archæological Researches among the Ruins of Sarai_
[in Russian] by M. Gregorieff [who appears to have also published a
pamphlet specially on the site, but this has not been available];
_Historisch-geographische Darstellung des Stromsystems der Wolga,
von Ferd. Heinr. Müller_, Berlin, 1839, 568–577; _Ibn. Bat._ II.
447; _Not. et Extraits_, XIII. i. 286; _Pallas, Voyages; Cathay_,
231, etc.; _Erdmann, Numi Asiatici_, pp. 362 _seqq._; _Arabs._ I.
p. 381.)
NOTE 2.—BOLGHAR, our author’s Bolgara, was the capital of the
region sometimes called Great Bulgaria, by Abulfeda _Inner
Bulgaria_, and stood a few miles from the left bank of the Volga,
in latitude about 54° 54′, and 90 miles below Kazan. The old Arab
writers regarded it as nearly the limit of the habitable world, and
told wonders of the cold, the brief summer nights, and the fossil
ivory that was found in its vicinity. This was exported, and with
peltry, wax, honey, hazel-nuts, and Russia leather, formed the
staple articles of trade. The last item derived from Bolghar the
name which it still bears all over Asia. (See Bk. II. ch. xvi.,
and Note.) Bolghar seems to have been the northern limit of Arab
travel, and was visited by the curious (by Ibn Batuta among others)
in order to witness the phenomena of the short summer night, as
tourists now visit Hammerfest to witness its entire absence.
Russian chroniclers speak of an earlier capital of the Bulgarian
kingdom, Brakhimof, near the mouth of the Kama, destroyed by
Andrew, Grand Duke of Rostof and Susdal, about 1160; and this may
have been the city referred to in the earlier Arabic accounts. The
fullest of these is by Ibn Fozlán, who accompanied an embassy from
the Court of Baghdad to Bolghar, in A.D. 921. The King and people
had about this time been converted to Islam, having previously, as
it would seem, professed Christianity. Nevertheless, a Mahomedan
writer of the 14th century says the people had then long renounced
Islam for the worship of the Cross. (_Not. et Extr._ XIII. i. 270.)
[Illustration: Ruins of Bolghar.]
Bolghar was first captured by the Mongols in 1225. It seems to have
perished early in the 15th century, after which Kazan practically
took its place. Its position is still marked by a village called
Bolgari, where ruins of Mahomedan character remain, and where coins
and inscriptions have been found. Coins of the Kings of Bolghar,
struck in the 10th century, have been described by Fraehn, as
well as coins of the Mongol period struck at Bolghar. Its latest
known coin is of A.H. 818 (A.D. 1415–16). A history of Bolghar was
written in the first half of the 12th century by Yakub Ibn Noman,
Kadhi of the city, but this is not known to be extant.
Fraehn shows ground for believing the people to have been a mixture
of Fins, Slavs, and Turks. Nicephorus Gregoras supposes that they
took their name from the great river on which they dwelt (Βούλγα).
[“The ruins [of Bolghar],” says Bretschneider, in his _Mediæval
Researches_, published in 1888, vol. ii. p. 82, “still exist, and
have been the subject of learned investigation by several Russian
scholars. These remains are found on the spot where now the village
_Uspenskoye_, called also _Bolgarskoye_ (Bolgari), stands, in the
district of Spask, province of Kazan. This village is about 4
English miles distant from the Volga, east of it, and 83 miles from
Kazan.” Part of the Bulgars removed to the Balkans; others remained
in their native country on the shores of the Azov Sea, and were
subjugated by the Khazars. At the beginning of the 9th century,
they marched northwards to the Volga and the Kama, and established
the kingdom of Great Bulgaria. Their chief city, Bolghar, was on
the bank of the Volga, but the river runs now to the west; as the
Kama also underwent a change in its course, it is possible that
formerly Bolghar was built at the junction of the two rivers.
(Cf. _Reclus, Europe russe_, p. 761.) The Bulgars were converted
to Islam in 922. Their country was first invaded by the Mongols
under Subutai in 1223; this General conquered it in 1236, the
capital was destroyed the following year, and the country annexed
to the kingdom of Kipchak. Bolghar was again destroyed in 1391 by
Tamerlan. In 1438, Ulugh Mohammed, cousin of Toka Timur, younger
son of Juji, transformed this country into the khanate of Kazan,
which survived till 1552. It had probably been the capital of the
Golden Horde before Sarai.
With reference to the early Christianity of the Bulgarians, to
which Yule refers in his note, the _Laurentian Chronicle_ (A.D.
1229), quoted by Shpilevsky, adduces evidence to show that in the
Great City, _i.e._ _Bulgar_, there were Russian Christians and a
Christian cemetery, and the death of a Bulgarian Christian martyr
is related in the same chronicle as well as in the Nikon, Tver, and
Tatischef annals in which his name is given. (Cf. Shpilevsky, _Anc.
towns and other Bulgaro-Tartar monuments_, Kazan, 1877, p. 158
seq.; _Rockhill’s Rubruck_, Hakl. Soc. p. 121, note.)—H. C.]
The severe and lasting winter is spoken of by Ibn Fozlán and other
old writers in terms that seem to point to a modern mitigation
of climate. It is remarkable, too, that Ibn Fozlán speaks of the
aurora as of very frequent occurrence, which is not now the case
in that latitude. We may suspect this frequency to have been
connected with the greater cold indicated, and perhaps with a
different position of the magnetic pole. Ibn Fozlán’s account of
the aurora is very striking:—“Shortly before sunset the horizon
became all very ruddy, and at the same time I heard sounds in the
upper air, with a dull rustling. I looked up and beheld sweeping
over me a fire-red cloud, from which these sounds issued, and in
it movements, as it were, of men and horses; the men grasping
bows, lances, and swords. This I saw, or thought I saw. Then there
appeared a white cloud of like aspect; in it also I beheld armed
horsemen, and these rushed against the former as one squadron of
horse charges another. We were so terrified at this that we turned
with humble prayer to the Almighty, whereupon the natives about us
wondered and broke into loud laughter. We, however, continued to
gaze, seeing how one cloud charged the other, remained confused
with it a while, and then sundered again. These movements lasted
deep into the night, and then all vanished.”
(_Fraehn, Ueber die Wolga Bulgaren_, Petersb. 1832; _Gold.
Horde_, 8, 9, 423–424; _Not. et Extr._ II. 541; _Ibn Bat._ II.
398; _Büschings Mag._ V. 492; _Erdmann, Numi Asiat._ I. 315–318,
333–334, 520–535; _Niceph. Gregoras_, II. 2, 2.)
NOTE 3.—ALAU is Polo’s representation of the name of Hulákú,
brother of the Great Kaans Mangu and Kublai and founder of the
Mongol dynasty in Persia. In the Mongol pronunciation guttural
and palatal consonants are apt to be elided, hence this spelling.
The same name is written by Pope Alexander IV., in addressing the
Khan, _Olao_, by Pachymeres and Gregoras Χαλαὺ and Χαλαοῦ, by
Hayton _Haolon_, by Ibn Batuta _Huláún_, as well as in a letter of
Hulaku’s own, as given by Makrizi.
The war in question is related in Rashíduddín’s history, and by
Polo himself towards the end of the work. It began in the summer of
1262, and ended about eight months later. Hence the Polos must have
reached Barka’s Court in 1261.
Marco always applies to the Mongol Khans of Persia the title of
“Lords of the East” (_Levant_), and to the Khans of Kipchak that of
“Lords of the West” (_Ponent_). We use the term _Levant_ still with
a similar specific application, and in another form _Anatolia_. I
think it best to preserve the terms _Levant_ and _Ponent_ when used
in this way.
[Robert Parke in his translation out of Spanish of Mendoza,
_The Historie of the great and mightie kingdome of China_ ...
London, printed by I. Wolfe for Edward White, 1588, uses the word
_Ponent_: “You shall understande that this mightie kingdome is the
Orientalest part of all Asia, and his next neighbour towards the
_Ponent_ is the kingdome of _Quachinchina_ ... (p. 2).”—H. C.]
NOTE 4.—UCACA or UKEK was a town on the right bank of the Volga,
nearly equidistant between Sarai and Bolghar, and about six miles
south of the modern Saratov, where a village called _Uwek_ still
exists. Ukek is not mentioned before the Mongol domination, and is
supposed to have been of Mongol foundation, as the name Ukek is
said in Mongol to signify a dam of hurdles. The city is mentioned
by Abulfeda as marking the extremity of “the empire of the Barka
Tartars,” and Ibn Batuta speaks of it as “one day distant from
the hills of the Russians.” Polo therefore means that it was the
frontier of the Ponent towards Russia. Ukek was the site of a
Franciscan convent in the 14th century; it is mentioned several
times in the campaigns of Timur, and was destroyed by his army.
It is not mentioned under the form Ukek after this, but appears
as _Uwek_ and _Uwesh_ in Russian documents of the 16th century.
Perhaps this was always the Slavonic form, for it already is
written _Uguech_ (= Uwek) in Wadding’s 14th century catalogue of
convents. Anthony Jenkinson, in Hakluyt, gives an observation of
its latitude, as _Oweke_ (51° 40′), and Christopher Burrough, in
the same collection, gives a description of it as _Oueak_, and the
latitude as 51° 30′ (some 7′ too much). In his time (1579) there
were the remains of a “very faire stone castle” and city, with old
tombs exhibiting sculptures and inscriptions. All these have long
vanished. Burrough was told by the Russians that the town “was
swallowed into the earth by the justice of God, for the wickednesse
of the people that inhabited the same.” Lepechin in 1769 found
nothing remaining but part of an earthen rampart and some
underground vaults of larger bricks, which the people dug out for
use. He speaks of coins and other relics as frequent, and the like
have been found more recently. Coins with Mongol-Arab inscriptions,
struck at Ukek by Tuktugai Khan in 1306, have been described by
Fraehn and Erdmann.
(_Fraehn, Ueber die ehemalige Mong. Stadt Ukek_, etc., Petersb.
1835; _Gold. Horde_; _Ibn Bat._ II. 414; _Abulfeda, in Büsching_,
V. 365; _Ann. Minorum_, sub anno 1400; _Pétis de la Croix_, II.
355, 383, 388; _Hakluyt_, ed. 1809, I. 375 and 472; _Lepechin,
Tagebuch der Reise_, etc., I. 235–237; _Rockhill, Rubruck_,
120–121, note 2.)
NOTE 5.—The great River Tigeri or Tigris is the Volga, as Pauthier
rightly shows. It receives the same name from the Monk Pascal of
Vittoria in 1338. (_Cathay_, p. 234.) Perhaps this arose out of
some legend that the Tigris was a reappearance of the same river.
The ecclesiastical historian, Nicephorus Callistus, appears to
imply that the Tigris coming from Paradise flows under the Caspian
to emerge in Kurdistan. (See IX. 19.)
The “17 days” applies to one stretch of desert. The whole journey
from Ukek Bokhara would take some 60 days at least. Ibn Batuta is
58 days from Sarai to Bokhara, and of the last section he says, “we
entered the desert which extends between Khwarizm and Bokhara, and
_which has an extent of 18 days’ journey_.” (III. 19.)
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