Translated by William
Marsden (from the Italian of Giambattista Ramusio's printed edition
of 1553). With an Introduction by Benjamin Colbert.
Marco Polo (1254-1329) has achieved an almost archetypal status as
a traveller, and his Travels is one of the first great travel books
of Western literature, outside the ancient world. The Travels recounts
Polo's journey to the eastern court of Kublai Khan, the chieftan of
the Mongol empire which covered the Asian continent, but which was
almost unknown to Polo's contemporaries. Encompassing a twenty-four
year period from 1721, Polo's account details his travels in the service
of the empire, from Beijing to northern India and ends with the remarkanble
story of Polo's return voyage from the Chinese port of Amoy to the
Persian Gulf. Alternately factual and fantastic, Polo's prose at once
reveals the medieval imagination's limits, and captures the wonder
of subsequent travel writers when faced with the unfamiliar, the exotic
or the unknown.