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Rabban Bar Sauma

Rabban Bar Ṣawma (Syriac language: ܪܒܢ ܒܪ ܨܘܡܐ, [rɑbbɑn bɑrsˤɑwma]; c. 1220 – January 1294), also known as Rabban Ṣawma or Rabban Çauma[2] (simplified Chinese: 拉班·扫马; traditional Chinese: 拉賓掃務瑪; pinyin: lābīn sǎowùmǎ), was a Uyghur or Ongud monk turned diplomat of the "Nestorian" Church of the East in China. He is known for embarking on a pilgrimage from Yuan China to Jerusalem with one of his students, Rabban Markos. Due to military unrest along the way, they never reached their destination, but instead spent many years in Ilkhanate-controlled Baghdad.


ܒܪ ܨܘܡܐ Bar Ṣawma
("Son of Fasting")
ChurchChurch of the East
SeeBaghdad
Personal details
Bornc. 1220
Zhongdu (modern-day Beijing), Jin China
DiedJanuary 1294 (aged c. 73–74)
Baghdad, Ilkhanate
DenominationChurch of the East
ResidenceBaghdad, Maragheh
OccupationMonk, ambassador, writer
Rabban Bar Ṣawma traveled from Beijing in Asia to Rome and Paris[1] and Bordeaux in Europe, meeting with the major rulers of the period.

The younger Markos was eventually elected Yahballaha III, Patriarch of the Church of the East and later suggested his teacher Rabban Bar Ṣawma be sent on another mission, as Mongol ambassador to Europe. The elderly monk met with many of the European monarchs, as well as the Pope, in attempts to arrange a Franco-Mongol alliance. The mission bore no fruit, but in his later years in Baghdad, Rabban Bar Ṣawma documented his lifetime of travel. His written account of his journeys is of unique interest to modern historians, as it gives a picture of medieval Europe at the close of the Crusades, painted by a keenly-intelligent, broadminded, and statesmanlike observer.[3]

Bar Ṣawma's travels occurred prior to the return of Marco Polo to Europe, and his writings give a reverse viewpoint, of the East looking to the West.

Early life edit

 
 
Left image: A young Christian woman, possibly Uyghur or Han Chinese (now in Gaochang, China), Tang period, 602–654
Right image: Wall painting from a Christian church showing a scene of preaching on Palm Sunday, Qocho (now Gaochang, China), 683–770 AD

Rabban ("Master"; c.f. Hebrew "Rabbi" in Judaism) Bar Ṣawma was born c. 1220 in or near modern-day Beijing, known then as Zhongdu,[4] later as Khanbaliq under Mongol rule. According to Bar Hebraeus he was of Uyghur origin.[5] Chinese accounts describe his heritage as Öngüd, a Turkic people classified as members of the "Mongol" caste under Yuan law.[6] The name bar Ṣawma is Aramaic for "Son of Fasting"[7] though he was born to a wealthy family. He was a "Church of the East Christian", and became an ascetic monk around the age of 20 and then a religious teacher for decades.

Pilgrimage to Jerusalem edit

In his middle age, Rabban Bar Sauma and one of his younger students, Rabban Markos, embarked on a journey from Yuan China to make pilgrimage to Jerusalem.[8] They traveled by way of the former Tangut country, Khotan, Kashgar, Taraz in the Syr Darya valley, Khorasan (now Afghanistan), Maragha (now Azerbaijan) and Mosul, arriving at Ani in the Kingdom of Georgia. Warnings of danger on the routes to southern Syria turned them from their purpose,[3] and they traveled to Mongol-controlled Persia, the Ilkhanate, where they were welcomed by Patriarch Denha I of the Church of the East. The Patriarch requested the two monks to visit the court of the Mongol Ilkhanate ruler Abaqa Khan, to obtain confirmation letters for Mar Denha's ordination as Patriarch in 1266. During the journey, Rabban Markos was declared a "Nestorian" bishop. The Patriarch then attempted to send the monks as messengers back to China, but military conflict along the route delayed their departure, and they remained in Baghdad. When the Patriarch died, Rabban Markos was elected as his replacement, Yahballaha III, in 1281. The two monks traveled to Maragheh to have the selection confirmed by Abaqa, but the Ilkhanate khan died before their arrival, and was succeeded by his son, Arghun.

It was Arghun's desire to form a strategic Franco-Mongol alliance with the Christian Europeans against their common enemy, the Muslim Mamluk Sultanate at Cairo. A few years later, the new patriarch Yahballaha III suggested his former teacher Rabban Bar Ṣawma for the embassy, to meet with the Pope and the European monarchs.

Ambassador to Europe edit

In 1287, the elderly Bar Sauma embarked on his journey to Europe, bearing gifts and letters from Arghun to the Eastern Roman emperor, the Pope, and the European kings.[3] He followed the embassy of another "Nestorian", Isa Kelemechi, sent by Arghun to Pope Honorius IV, in 1285.[9][10]

Rabban Bar Sauma traveled with a large retinue of assistants, and 30 riding animals. Companions included the Church of the East Christian (archaon) Sabadinus; Thomas de Anfusis (or Tommaso d'Anfossi),[11] who helped as interpreter and was also a member of a famous Genoese banking company;[12] and an Italian interpreter named Uguetus or Ugeto (Ughetto).[13][14] Bar Sauma likely did not speak any European languages, though he was known to be fluent in Chinese, Turkic, and Persian, and he was able to read Syriac.[15] Europeans communicated to him in Persian.[16]

He traveled overland through Armenia to either the Empire of Trebizond or through the Sultanate of Rum to the Simisso[17] on the Black Sea, then by boat to Constantinople, where he had an audience with Andronicus II Palaeologus. Bar Sauma's writings give a particularly enthusiastic description of the beautiful Hagia Sophia.[3] He next traveled to Italy, again journeying by ship. As their course took them past the island of Sicily, he witnessed and recorded the great eruption of Mount Etna on 18 June 1287. A few days after his arrival, he also witnessed a naval battle in the Bay of Sorrento on St. John's Day, 24 June 1287, during the conflict of the Sicilian Vespers. The battle was between the fleet of Charles II (whom he calls Irid Shardalo, i.e. "Il re Charles Due"), who had welcomed him in his realm, and James II of Aragon, king of Sicily (whom he calls Irid Arkon, i.e. "Il re de Aragon"). According to Bar Sauma, James II was victorious, and his forces killed 12,000 men.

He next traveled to Rome, but too late to meet Pope Honorius IV, who had recently died. So Bar Sauma instead engaged in negotiations with the cardinals,[3] and visited St. Peter's Basilica.

Bar Sauma next made stops in Tuscany (Thuzkan) and the Republic of Genoa, on his way to Paris. He spent the winter of 1287–1288 in Genoa, a famous banking capital.[12] In France (Frangestan), he spent one month with King Philip the Fair, who seemingly responded positively to the arrival of the Mongol embassy, gave him numerous presents, and sent one of his noblemen, Gobert de Helleville, to accompany Bar Sauma back to Mongol lands. Gobert de Helleville departed on 2 February 1288, with clercs Robert de Senlis and Guillaume de Bruyères, as well as l'arbalétrier (crossbowman) Audin de Bourges. They joined Bar Sauma when he later returned through Rome, and accompanied him back to Persia.[18][19]

In Gascony in southern France, which at that time was in English hands, Bar Sauma met King Edward I of England, probably in the capital of Bordeaux. Edward responded enthusiastically to the embassy, but ultimately proved unable to join a military alliance due to conflict at home, especially with the Welsh and the Scots.

Upon returning to Rome, Bar Sauma was cordially received by the newly elected Pope Nicholas IV, who gave him communion on Palm Sunday, 1288, allowing him to celebrate his own Eucharist in the capital of Latin Christianity.[3] Nicholas commissioned Bar Sauma to visit the Christians of the East, and entrusted to him a precious tiara to be presented to Mar Yahballaha[3] (Rabban Bar Sauma's former student, Markos). Bar Sauma then returned to Baghdad in 1288, carrying messages and many other gifts from the various European leaders.[20]

The delivered letters were in turn answered by Arghun in 1289, forwarded by the Genoese merchant Buscarello de Ghizolfi, a diplomatic agent for the Il-khans. In the letter to Philip IV, Arghun mentions Bar Sauma:[21]

 
Extract of the letter of Arghun to Philip IV, in the Uyghur-Mongolian script, dated 1289, in which Rabban Bar Sauma is mentioned. The seal is that of the Great Khan, with Chinese Script: 「輔國安民之寶」, which means "Seal of the upholder of the State and the purveyor of peace to the People". French National Archives.

"Under the power of the eternal sky, the message of the great king, Arghun, to the king of France..., said: I have accepted the word that you forwarded by the messengers under Saymer Sagura (Rabban Bar Sauma), saying that if the warriors of Il Khaan invade Egypt you would support them. We would also lend our support by going there at the end of the Tiger year’s winter [1290], worshiping the sky, and settle in Damascus in the early spring [1291].

If you send your warriors as promised and conquer Egypt, worshiping the sky, then I shall give you Jerusalem. If any of our warriors arrive later than arranged, all will be futile and no one will benefit. If you care to please give me your impressions, and I would also be very willing to accept any samples of French opulence that you care to burden your messengers with.

I send this to you by Myckeril and say: All will be known by the power of the sky and the greatness of kings. This letter was scribed on the sixth of the early summer in the year of the Ox at Ho’ndlon."

— France royal archives[22]

The exchanges towards the formation of an alliance with the Europeans ultimately proved fruitless, and Arghun's attempts were eventually abandoned.[2] However, Rabban Bar Sauma did succeed in making some important contacts which encouraged communication and trade between the East and West. Aside from King Philip's embassy to the Mongols, the Papacy also sent missionaries such as Giovanni da Montecorvino to the Mongol court.

Later years edit

After his embassy to Europe, Bar Sauma lived out the rest of his years in Baghdad. It was probably during this time that he wrote the account of his travels, which was published in French in 1895 and in English in 1928 as The Monks of Kublai Khan, Emperor of China or The History of the Life and Travels of Rabban Sawma, Envoy and Plenipotentiary of the Mongol Khans to the Kings of Europe, and Markos Who as Mar Yahbh-Allaha III Became Patriarch of the Church of the East in Asia, translated and edited by Sir E. A. Wallis Budge. The narrative is unique for its observations of medieval Europe during the end of the Crusading period, through the eyes of an observant outsider from a culture thousands of miles away.

Rabban Bar Sauma died in 1294, in Baghdad.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rossabi, Morris (2014). From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia: The Writings of Morris Rossabi. BRILL. p. 670. ISBN 978-90-04-28529-3.
  2. ^ a b Mantran, p. 298
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rabban Bar Sauma" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 767.
  4. ^ Kathleen Kuiper & editors of Encyclopædia Britannica (31 August 2006). "Rabban bar Sauma: Mongol Envoy." Encyclopædia Britannica (online source). Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  5. ^ Carter, Thomas Francis (1955). The invention of printing in China and its spread westward. Ronald Press Co. p. 171.
  6. ^ Moule, A. C., Christians in China before 1550 (1930; 2011 reprint), 94 & 103; also Pelliot, Paul in T'oung-pao 15(1914), pp.630–36.
  7. ^ Phillips, p. 123
  8. ^ Jacques Gernet (1996). A history of Chinese civilization. Cambridge University Press. p. 376. ISBN 0-521-49781-7. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  9. ^ The Mongols and the West, 1221–1410 Peter Jackson p.169
  10. ^ The Cambridge history of Iran William Bayne Fisher, John Andrew Boyle p.370
  11. ^ Morris Rossabi (28 November 2014). From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia: The Writings of Morris Rossabi. BRILL. pp. 387–. ISBN 978-90-04-28529-3.
  12. ^ a b Phillips, p. 102
  13. ^ Grousset, p.845
  14. ^ Rossabi, pp. 103–104
  15. ^ Morris Rossabi (28 November 2014). From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia: The Writings of Morris Rossabi. BRILL. pp. 385–. ISBN 978-90-04-28529-3.
  16. ^ Morris Rossabi (28 November 2014). From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia: The Writings of Morris Rossabi. BRILL. pp. 386–. ISBN 978-90-04-28529-3.
  17. ^ Zehiroğlu, Ahmet M. (2014) Bar Sauma's Black Sea Journey
  18. ^ René Grousset, Histoire des croisades et du royaume franc de Jérusalem, vol. III, p. 718
  19. ^ Pierre Klein, La pérégrination vers l'occident: De Pékin à Paris, le voyage de deux moines nestoriens au temps de Marco Polo (ISBN 978-2-88086-492-7), p. 224
  20. ^ Boyle, in Camb. Hist. Iran V, pp. 370–71; Budge, pp. 165–97. Source 4 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Encyclopedia Iranica Source 4 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Source 2008-06-18 at the Wayback Machine

References edit

  • Beazley, C. R., Dawn of Modern Geography, ii.15, 352; iii.12, 189–190, 539–541.
  • Brock, Sebastian P. (1969). "Rabban Ṣauma à Constantinople (1287)". Mémorial Mgr Gabriel Khouri-Sarkis (1898-1968). Louvain: Imprimerie orientaliste. pp. 245–253.
  • Chabot, J. B.'s translation and edition of the Histoire du Patriarche Mar Jabalaha III. et du moine Rabban Cauma (from the Syriac) in Revue de l'Orient Latin, 1893, pp. 566–610; 1894, pp. 73–143, 235–300
  • Mantran, Robert (1986). "A Turkish or Mongolian Islam". In Fossier, Robert (ed.). The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages: 1250–1520. volume 3. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-26646-8.
  • Odericus Raynaldus, Annales Ecclesiastici (continuation of Baronius), AD 1288, f xxxv-xxxvi; 1289, lxi
  • Phillips, J. R. S. (1998). The Medieval Expansion of Europe (second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820740-9.
  • Records of the Wardrobe and Household, 1286-89, ed. Byerly and Byerly (HMSO, 1986), nos. 543, 1082 (for the meeting with Edward I at St Sever).
  • Rossabi, Morris (1992). Voyager from Xanadu: Rabban Sauma and the first journey from China to the West. Kodansha International Ltd. ISBN 4-7700-1650-6.
  • Wadding, Luke, Annales Minorum, v.169, 196, 170-173
  • Zehiroglu, Ahmet M. (2014) ; "Bar Sauma's Black Sea Journey"

Translations edit

Rabban Bar Sauma's travel narrative has been translated into English twice:

  • Montgomery, James A., History of Yaballaha III, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1927)
  • Budge, E. A. Wallis, The Monks of Kublai Khan, (London: Religious Tract Society, 1928). Online

A critical edition of the Syriac text with an English translation was published in 2021:

  • Borbone, Pier Giorgio, History of Mar Yahballaha and Rabban Sauma. Edited, translated, and annotated by -, (Hamburg, Verlag tredition, 2021)

External links edit

  • The history and Life of Rabban Bar Sauma. ()

rabban, sauma, rabban, Ṣawma, syriac, language, ܪܒܢ, ܒܪ, ܨܘܡܐ, rɑbbɑn, bɑrsˤɑwma, 1220, january, 1294, also, known, rabban, Ṣawma, rabban, çauma, simplified, chinese, 拉班, 扫马, traditional, chinese, 拉賓掃務瑪, pinyin, lābīn, sǎowùmǎ, uyghur, ongud, monk, turned, dip. Rabban Bar Ṣawma Syriac language ܪܒܢ ܒܪ ܨܘܡܐ rɑbbɑn bɑrsˤɑwma c 1220 January 1294 also known as Rabban Ṣawma or Rabban Cauma 2 simplified Chinese 拉班 扫马 traditional Chinese 拉賓掃務瑪 pinyin labin sǎowumǎ was a Uyghur or Ongud monk turned diplomat of the Nestorian Church of the East in China He is known for embarking on a pilgrimage from Yuan China to Jerusalem with one of his students Rabban Markos Due to military unrest along the way they never reached their destination but instead spent many years in Ilkhanate controlled Baghdad Rabban ܪܒܢ ܒܪ ܨܘܡܐ Bar Ṣawma Son of Fasting ChurchChurch of the EastSeeBaghdadPersonal detailsBornc 1220Zhongdu modern day Beijing Jin ChinaDiedJanuary 1294 aged c 73 74 Baghdad IlkhanateDenominationChurch of the EastResidenceBaghdad MaraghehOccupationMonk ambassador writerRabban Bar Ṣawma traveled from Beijing in Asia to Rome and Paris 1 and Bordeaux in Europe meeting with the major rulers of the period The younger Markos was eventually elected Yahballaha III Patriarch of the Church of the East and later suggested his teacher Rabban Bar Ṣawma be sent on another mission as Mongol ambassador to Europe The elderly monk met with many of the European monarchs as well as the Pope in attempts to arrange a Franco Mongol alliance The mission bore no fruit but in his later years in Baghdad Rabban Bar Ṣawma documented his lifetime of travel His written account of his journeys is of unique interest to modern historians as it gives a picture of medieval Europe at the close of the Crusades painted by a keenly intelligent broadminded and statesmanlike observer 3 Bar Ṣawma s travels occurred prior to the return of Marco Polo to Europe and his writings give a reverse viewpoint of the East looking to the West Contents 1 Early life 2 Pilgrimage to Jerusalem 3 Ambassador to Europe 4 Later years 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Translations 9 External linksEarly life edit nbsp nbsp Left image A young Christian woman possibly Uyghur or Han Chinese now in Gaochang China Tang period 602 654 Right image Wall painting from a Christian church showing a scene of preaching on Palm Sunday Qocho now Gaochang China 683 770 AD Rabban Master c f Hebrew Rabbi in Judaism Bar Ṣawma was born c 1220 in or near modern day Beijing known then as Zhongdu 4 later as Khanbaliq under Mongol rule According to Bar Hebraeus he was of Uyghur origin 5 Chinese accounts describe his heritage as Ongud a Turkic people classified as members of the Mongol caste under Yuan law 6 The name bar Ṣawma is Aramaic for Son of Fasting 7 though he was born to a wealthy family He was a Church of the East Christian and became an ascetic monk around the age of 20 and then a religious teacher for decades Pilgrimage to Jerusalem editIn his middle age Rabban Bar Sauma and one of his younger students Rabban Markos embarked on a journey from Yuan China to make pilgrimage to Jerusalem 8 They traveled by way of the former Tangut country Khotan Kashgar Taraz in the Syr Darya valley Khorasan now Afghanistan Maragha now Azerbaijan and Mosul arriving at Ani in the Kingdom of Georgia Warnings of danger on the routes to southern Syria turned them from their purpose 3 and they traveled to Mongol controlled Persia the Ilkhanate where they were welcomed by Patriarch Denha I of the Church of the East The Patriarch requested the two monks to visit the court of the Mongol Ilkhanate ruler Abaqa Khan to obtain confirmation letters for Mar Denha s ordination as Patriarch in 1266 During the journey Rabban Markos was declared a Nestorian bishop The Patriarch then attempted to send the monks as messengers back to China but military conflict along the route delayed their departure and they remained in Baghdad When the Patriarch died Rabban Markos was elected as his replacement Yahballaha III in 1281 The two monks traveled to Maragheh to have the selection confirmed by Abaqa but the Ilkhanate khan died before their arrival and was succeeded by his son Arghun It was Arghun s desire to form a strategic Franco Mongol alliance with the Christian Europeans against their common enemy the Muslim Mamluk Sultanate at Cairo A few years later the new patriarch Yahballaha III suggested his former teacher Rabban Bar Ṣawma for the embassy to meet with the Pope and the European monarchs Ambassador to Europe editFurther information Europeans in Medieval China In 1287 the elderly Bar Sauma embarked on his journey to Europe bearing gifts and letters from Arghun to the Eastern Roman emperor the Pope and the European kings 3 He followed the embassy of another Nestorian Isa Kelemechi sent by Arghun to Pope Honorius IV in 1285 9 10 Rabban Bar Sauma traveled with a large retinue of assistants and 30 riding animals Companions included the Church of the East Christian archaon Sabadinus Thomas de Anfusis or Tommaso d Anfossi 11 who helped as interpreter and was also a member of a famous Genoese banking company 12 and an Italian interpreter named Uguetus or Ugeto Ughetto 13 14 Bar Sauma likely did not speak any European languages though he was known to be fluent in Chinese Turkic and Persian and he was able to read Syriac 15 Europeans communicated to him in Persian 16 He traveled overland through Armenia to either the Empire of Trebizond or through the Sultanate of Rum to the Simisso 17 on the Black Sea then by boat to Constantinople where he had an audience with Andronicus II Palaeologus Bar Sauma s writings give a particularly enthusiastic description of the beautiful Hagia Sophia 3 He next traveled to Italy again journeying by ship As their course took them past the island of Sicily he witnessed and recorded the great eruption of Mount Etna on 18 June 1287 A few days after his arrival he also witnessed a naval battle in the Bay of Sorrento on St John s Day 24 June 1287 during the conflict of the Sicilian Vespers The battle was between the fleet of Charles II whom he calls Irid Shardalo i e Il re Charles Due who had welcomed him in his realm and James II of Aragon king of Sicily whom he calls Irid Arkon i e Il re de Aragon According to Bar Sauma James II was victorious and his forces killed 12 000 men He next traveled to Rome but too late to meet Pope Honorius IV who had recently died So Bar Sauma instead engaged in negotiations with the cardinals 3 and visited St Peter s Basilica Bar Sauma next made stops in Tuscany Thuzkan and the Republic of Genoa on his way to Paris He spent the winter of 1287 1288 in Genoa a famous banking capital 12 In France Frangestan he spent one month with King Philip the Fair who seemingly responded positively to the arrival of the Mongol embassy gave him numerous presents and sent one of his noblemen Gobert de Helleville to accompany Bar Sauma back to Mongol lands Gobert de Helleville departed on 2 February 1288 with clercs Robert de Senlis and Guillaume de Bruyeres as well as l arbaletrier crossbowman Audin de Bourges They joined Bar Sauma when he later returned through Rome and accompanied him back to Persia 18 19 In Gascony in southern France which at that time was in English hands Bar Sauma met King Edward I of England probably in the capital of Bordeaux Edward responded enthusiastically to the embassy but ultimately proved unable to join a military alliance due to conflict at home especially with the Welsh and the Scots Upon returning to Rome Bar Sauma was cordially received by the newly elected Pope Nicholas IV who gave him communion on Palm Sunday 1288 allowing him to celebrate his own Eucharist in the capital of Latin Christianity 3 Nicholas commissioned Bar Sauma to visit the Christians of the East and entrusted to him a precious tiara to be presented to Mar Yahballaha 3 Rabban Bar Sauma s former student Markos Bar Sauma then returned to Baghdad in 1288 carrying messages and many other gifts from the various European leaders 20 The delivered letters were in turn answered by Arghun in 1289 forwarded by the Genoese merchant Buscarello de Ghizolfi a diplomatic agent for the Il khans In the letter to Philip IV Arghun mentions Bar Sauma 21 nbsp Extract of the letter of Arghun to Philip IV in the Uyghur Mongolian script dated 1289 in which Rabban Bar Sauma is mentioned The seal is that of the Great Khan with Chinese Script 輔國安民之寶 which means Seal of the upholder of the State and the purveyor of peace to the People French National Archives Under the power of the eternal sky the message of the great king Arghun to the king of France said I have accepted the word that you forwarded by the messengers under Saymer Sagura Rabban Bar Sauma saying that if the warriors of Il Khaan invade Egypt you would support them We would also lend our support by going there at the end of the Tiger year s winter 1290 worshiping the sky and settle in Damascus in the early spring 1291 If you send your warriors as promised and conquer Egypt worshiping the sky then I shall give you Jerusalem If any of our warriors arrive later than arranged all will be futile and no one will benefit If you care to please give me your impressions and I would also be very willing to accept any samples of French opulence that you care to burden your messengers with I send this to you by Myckeril and say All will be known by the power of the sky and the greatness of kings This letter was scribed on the sixth of the early summer in the year of the Ox at Ho ndlon France royal archives 22 The exchanges towards the formation of an alliance with the Europeans ultimately proved fruitless and Arghun s attempts were eventually abandoned 2 However Rabban Bar Sauma did succeed in making some important contacts which encouraged communication and trade between the East and West Aside from King Philip s embassy to the Mongols the Papacy also sent missionaries such as Giovanni da Montecorvino to the Mongol court Later years editAfter his embassy to Europe Bar Sauma lived out the rest of his years in Baghdad It was probably during this time that he wrote the account of his travels which was published in French in 1895 and in English in 1928 as The Monks of Kublai Khan Emperor of China or The History of the Life and Travels of Rabban Sawma Envoy and Plenipotentiary of the Mongol Khans to the Kings of Europe and Markos Who as Mar Yahbh Allaha III Became Patriarch of the Church of the East in Asia translated and edited by Sir E A Wallis Budge The narrative is unique for its observations of medieval Europe during the end of the Crusading period through the eyes of an observant outsider from a culture thousands of miles away Rabban Bar Sauma died in 1294 in Baghdad See also editChurch of the East in China Catholic Church in China John of Montecorvino Odoric of PordenoneNotes edit Rossabi Morris 2014 From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia The Writings of Morris Rossabi BRILL p 670 ISBN 978 90 04 28529 3 a b Mantran p 298 a b c d e f g Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Rabban Bar Sauma Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 767 Kathleen Kuiper amp editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 31 August 2006 Rabban bar Sauma Mongol Envoy Encyclopaedia Britannica online source Retrieved 6 September 2016 Carter Thomas Francis 1955 The invention of printing in China and its spread westward Ronald Press Co p 171 Moule A C Christians in China before 1550 1930 2011 reprint 94 amp 103 also Pelliot Paul in T oung pao 15 1914 pp 630 36 Phillips p 123 Jacques Gernet 1996 A history of Chinese civilization Cambridge University Press p 376 ISBN 0 521 49781 7 Retrieved 28 October 2010 The Mongols and the West 1221 1410 Peter Jackson p 169 The Cambridge history of Iran William Bayne Fisher John Andrew Boyle p 370 Morris Rossabi 28 November 2014 From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia The Writings of Morris Rossabi BRILL pp 387 ISBN 978 90 04 28529 3 a b Phillips p 102 Grousset p 845 Rossabi pp 103 104 Morris Rossabi 28 November 2014 From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia The Writings of Morris Rossabi BRILL pp 385 ISBN 978 90 04 28529 3 Morris Rossabi 28 November 2014 From Yuan to Modern China and Mongolia The Writings of Morris Rossabi BRILL pp 386 ISBN 978 90 04 28529 3 Zehiroglu Ahmet M 2014 Bar Sauma s Black Sea Journey Rene Grousset Histoire des croisades et du royaume franc de Jerusalem vol III p 718 Pierre Klein La peregrination vers l occident De Pekin a Paris le voyage de deux moines nestoriens au temps de Marco Polo ISBN 978 2 88086 492 7 p 224 Boyle in Camb Hist Iran V pp 370 71 Budge pp 165 97 Source Archived 4 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia Iranica Source Archived 4 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Source Archived 2008 06 18 at the Wayback MachineReferences editBeazley C R Dawn of Modern Geography ii 15 352 iii 12 189 190 539 541 Brock Sebastian P 1969 Rabban Ṣauma a Constantinople 1287 Memorial Mgr Gabriel Khouri Sarkis 1898 1968 Louvain Imprimerie orientaliste pp 245 253 Chabot J B s translation and edition of the Histoire du Patriarche Mar Jabalaha III et du moine Rabban Cauma from the Syriac in Revue de l Orient Latin 1893 pp 566 610 1894 pp 73 143 235 300 Mantran Robert 1986 A Turkish or Mongolian Islam In Fossier Robert ed The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages 1250 1520 volume 3 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26646 8 Odericus Raynaldus Annales Ecclesiastici continuation of Baronius AD 1288 f xxxv xxxvi 1289 lxi Phillips J R S 1998 The Medieval Expansion of Europe second ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820740 9 Records of the Wardrobe and Household 1286 89 ed Byerly and Byerly HMSO 1986 nos 543 1082 for the meeting with Edward I at St Sever Rossabi Morris 1992 Voyager from Xanadu Rabban Sauma and the first journey from China to the West Kodansha International Ltd ISBN 4 7700 1650 6 Wadding Luke Annales Minorum v 169 196 170 173 Zehiroglu Ahmet M 2014 Bar Sauma s Black Sea Journey Translations editRabban Bar Sauma s travel narrative has been translated into English twice Montgomery James A History of Yaballaha III New York Columbia University Press 1927 Budge E A Wallis The Monks of Kublai Khan London Religious Tract Society 1928 OnlineA critical edition of the Syriac text with an English translation was published in 2021 Borbone Pier Giorgio History of Mar Yahballaha and Rabban Sauma Edited translated and annotated by Hamburg Verlag tredition 2021 External links editThe history and Life of Rabban Bar Sauma online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rabban Bar Sauma amp oldid 1187937996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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