India in Fifteenth Century PDF
India in Fifteenth Century PDF
India in Fifteenth Century PDF
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V
McKEW PARR COLLECTION
MAGELLAN
and the AGE of DISCOVERY
PRESENTED TO
BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY • 1961
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^ C^es^A, ti
WORKS ISSUED BY
M.DCCC.LVII.
n~J
INDIA
IX THE
FIFTEENTH CENTURY,
HKING A COLLECTION OF
NARRATIVES OF VOYAGES
TO INDIA,
IN
FROM
ny
LONDON:
PRINTED FOR THE HAKLUYT SOCIETY.
1I.DCCC.I.VII.
THE IIAKLUYT SOCIETY.
SIR RODERICK IMPEY MURCHISON, G.C.St.S., F.R.S., D.C.L., Corr. Mora. Inst. Fr.
Hon. Mem. Imp. Acad. Sc. St. Petersburg, &c., &c,, President.
Ofy^^rfr^c^
CONTENTS.
Museum.
of St. James's.
a
11 EDITOR S PREFACE.
ment which led your son to express the desire to go to the aid of
the suffering among our brave soldiers wounded in the army of the
Crimea, I intrusted to him, in this sacred work, the accomplishment
of my views and intentions.
" Count Wielhorski Matuschkine completely justified my choice
and my confidence, by wise measures and indefatigable activity,
which were joined, in the midst of incessant labours, to his
feelings of humanity and ardent zeal. Thousands of wounded
men, thousands of mourning families have blessed, and still bless,
" Maeie."
K H. M.
INTRODUCTION.
—
commerce to the west, and the luxurious and costly
articles which that distant country alone could furnish,
became necessary to feed the pleasures and maintain
the grandeur of an empire glutted to satiety with the
successes of conquest. It was about eighty years after
INTRODUCTION. IX
says :
" These are the towns with which I am ac-
quainted. There are other cities, such as Canooj,
which He in deserts at great distances. These are
desolate countries, which the native merchants alone
can penetrate, so wide apart are they and so encom-
passed with dangers."
But whatever limit may be assigned to the advance
of the Muhammedans into the interior of the country,
it is monopoly of the
certain that they obtained a
Indian commerce, and a consequent enormous in-
crease in wealth and prosperity. Nor were their
successes confined to the East. The whole of the
north coast of Africa, from the Delta of the Nile to
the Straits of Gibraltar, together with a great part of
Spain, had submitted to their sway. Meanwhile,
during this same period, the continued hostilities in
XXll INTRODUCTION.
XXVlll INTRODUCTION.
second voyage.
In his third voyage Sindbad lands on an island of
tatooed and ferocious savages, which would seem ex-
actly to correspond with the character which oriental-
fact that after escaping from the Old Man of the Sea,
and setting sail again, he arrives almost immediately
at a place where they gathered cocoa nuts, that is,
INTRODUCTION. XXXVU
" '
The King of Serpents formerly reigned in Cha-
cragiri, a mountain very far to the eastward, but his
subjects were obliged by the power of Garuda to
INTRODUCTION. XXXIX
" The stories about the roc may easily have had some
connection with the discoveries of gigantic eggs,
doubtless made from time to time in the island of
tlic eagles have finished their meal, and run and take
away the stones." Epiphanius, who wrote this, is
spoken of in terms of great respect by many eccle-
siastical writers, and St. Jerome styles the treatise
here quoted " Egregium volumen, quod si legere
volueris, plenissimam scicntiam consequeris ;" and, in-
deed, it is by no means improbable that it was from the
account of Epiphanius that this story was first trans-
lated into Arabic. A similar account is given by Marco
Polo and by Nicolo de Conti, as of a usage which they
had heard was practised in India, and the position
ascribed to the mountain by Conti, namely, fifteen days
journey north of Vijanagar, renders it highly probable
that Golconda was alluded to. He calls the moun-
tain Albenigaras, and says that it was infested with
serpents. Marco Polo also speaks of these serpents,
and while his account agrees with that of Sindbad,
inasmuch as the serpents, which are the prey of Sind-
bad's rukh, are devoured by the Venetian's eagles,
that of Conti makes the vultures and eagles fly away
with the meat to places where they may be safe from
the serpents.
Another wonder deserving notice occurs in this
voyage as having attracted Sindbad's observation :
but when they collect it, they put it into basins and
pour hot water upon it ; it is then exposed to the
heat of the sun and dried in order to make it hard
and more substantial, in the course of which process
it becomes of a black colour.
" Cinnamon, ginger, and many other kinds of spices
also grow in this country.
" The inhabitants do not bury their dead, but em-
balm them with certain spices, put them upon stools
and cover them with cloths, every family keeping
apart. The flesh dries upon the bones, and as these
corpses resemble living beings, every one of them
recognises his parents and all the members of his
family for many years to come.
" These people worship the sun ; about half a mile
from every town they have large places of worship,
and every morning they run towards the rising sun ;
h
1 INTRODUCTION.
docs the current lie towards the south and never has
any other direction." Some attempts had doubtless
shown that vessels driven southward of Madagascar
had met with no land in that direction, and that an
immense tract of ocean lay beyond. Those who
escaped the dangers of this navigation, and were
brought back to India by the spring ("?) monsoon,
would w^arn other explorers from venturing upon
similar risks. The age of great maritime discovery
had not yet arrived, and if the monsoons presented
opportunities of boldly sailing out of sight of land,
they at the same time exposed adventurous navi-
gators to a new kind of danger, by carrying them far
\
INTRODUCTION. Ivii
stranded ships, and he was left with only his " praycr-
carpot and ten dinars, which," he says, " I kept as a
blessing, as they had been given me by some holy
men." At length receiving intelligence that all his
property had been confiscated on the arrival of the
jnnk in China, he determined to resume his wander-
ings ; and setting sail from Hanavar, arrived in ten
days at the Zabiyah-Al-Mohli, or Maldive Islands.
" These islands," he says, " constitute one of the
wonders of the world ; for their number is about two
thousand, nearly one hundred of which are so close
together as to form a kind of ring" " The people
are religious, chaste, and peaceable : they eat what
is lawful, and their prayers are answered. Their
bodies are weak, they make no war, and their wea-
pons are prayers." Their chief subsistence was on
fish, rice, and the fruit of the cocoa-tree ; and the
coir-rope, formed from the fibres of this tree, was
their principal article of commerce : a sea shell,
called wada, was current in lieu of coined money.
The arrival of Ibn Batuta in Ceylon had been the
effect of accident ; but once landed on the island, he
determined not to quit it without visiting the mighty
mountain of Serendib (Adam's Peak), which they
had seen from the sea, " like a pillar of smoke," at
the distance of nine days sail, and on the summit
of Avhich was the famous footstep attributed by tra-
dition to " our forefather, Adam." The Cingalese
name of this mountain is Sumanakuta^ and of the
footstep Serapadd or Bripada^ the footstep of Buddha.
The designation of Adam's Peak is derived from
i
Iviii INTRODUCTION.
the Java Islands ;" and from the further remark, that
" the sea is not navigable beyond these islands, and
the stormy atmosphere keeps navigators at a dis-
tance," it being well known how dangerous and
rarely attempted at the present day is a passage
through Torres' Straits, between New Guinea and
Australia. It would appear that Conti did not visit
these islands, but merely spoke from what he learned
of them in Java, into which country their products
were imported, and the more so as he states that,
sea passage.
The next journey into India given in this volume
is that of Athanasius Nikitin, a Russian, whose nar-
rative was translated work by the late
for the present
INTRODUCTION. IxxV
vol. vi):
" ' Hitherto, geographers have ignored the fact that
the honour of one of the oldest voyages to India,
undertaken and described by an European, belongs
to the age and country of Ivan III. Athanasius
Nikitin, a citizen of Tver, visited, about the year
1470, the kingdoms of the Deccan and of Golconda,
for purposes of commerce. We possess his diary,
which, although it does not evince any remarkable
power of observation, or any great amount of know-
ledge, still must be considered a curiosity, the more
so as the state of India at that time is but imper-
fectly known.'
" The manuscript alluded to by Karamsin, and of
which he gives an abstract (notes to vol. vi, p. 629),
was found in the archives of the monastery of Troitsk-
Sergivsk, and has been used for the present transla-
tion. Although never printed, it is less defective
than the one published by Stroew ; in which several
leaves are wanting. An authenticated copy of the
Ixxvi INTRODUCTION.
sixteenth century.
" A striking peculiarity of Nikitin's narrative, is the
frequent recurrence of oriental words and sentences,
spelt in Russian letters and embodied in the original
text. Some of these have been translated, while
others have been necessarily left without explana-
tion. As to the Russian text itself, it is in some
instances obscure, and in others utterly unintelli-
gible ; a circumstance which could not fail to be
apparent in the translation. The reader will meet
with more than one sentence of a doubtful mean-
ing, and occasionally be at a loss for the sense of
an entire passage. There is, besides, throughout
the memorial a want of coherence, and a most painful
absence of that minuteness of description which, in
placing before the reader the objects depicted, can
alone be considered as a source of interest or instruc-
tion.
" The date of Nikitin's journey may be inferred
from a note of the chronicler given in Stroew's work.
It states that the author accompanied Wessili Papin,
^
It was transmitted to Baron Brunnow, with the following letter
'
who was sent to the Shah of Shirvan with a present
of falcons from the Grand Duke Iwaii III, one year
before the war with Kazan.' It therefore appears
that our traveller set out in 1468. He must have
returned to llussia in 1474 for, according to his
;
Hormuz.
" Proceeding thence through Shiraz, Ispahan, Ka-
shan, Sultanieh, and Tabriz, he once more made his
appearance at the Orda of Hassan-beg. Anxious to
Ixxxii INTRODUCTION.
IxXXVi INTRODUCTION.
n
XC INTRODUCTION.
JOURNEY OF ABD-ER-RAZZAK,
AMBASSADOR FROM SIIAII ROKII.
" If Providence locre not the mover of all the events of the
world, hoio is it that the progress of those events is so fre-
qucnthj in opposition to our oivn will ?"
" In every occurrence, tvhethcr fortunate or unfortunate, it
ruins of a city, the wall of which and four bazaars could still
hither those rare and precious articles which the sun, the
1 Pekin.
2 This name in Indian language means, " the country under the wind,"
and is referred to India beyond the Ganges, comprising the whole South-
East Peninsula.
•^
Query, Shahnoor or Sivanur, in the province of Bejapoor, fifty miles
south south-east from Darwar.
* The Maldives.
" The author means the ports of the sovereignties so named, as
the capital cities bearing the same name were not on the sea-coast.
The city of Bijanagur, now in ruins, was once the metropolis of a
mighty Hindoo empire. It was thither that our author, as the reader
will hereafter see, ultimately directed his steps and his narrative mainly
;
consists of the description of this empire, its capital, and people. The
remains of the city are situated on the south bank of the Toombuddra
river, directly opposite to Annagoondy. It was begun to be built in a.d.
1:336, and was finished in 1343. The incessant hostilities between the
Mahommedan sovereigns of the Deccan and this Hindoo principality,
resulted in the total defeat of Ram Rajah, the sovereign of Bijanagur, and
the sacking of the metropolis in 1565, and its subsequent depopulation
in 1567. The celebrated Italian traveller Cesare Federici, who was there
in the latter year, speaks with enthusiasm of its extent and enormous
wealth. An interesting account of this empire and its fall, is given in
the commencing chapter of Colonel Wilks's " Historical Sketches of the
South of India," London, 1810, 4to.
^ The town now known as the capital of a district of the same
name, is situated in the province of Beeder, one hundred and five
miles west of Hyderabad. Though now of little note, it was formerly
famous as the metropolis both of a Hindoo and Mahomedau sovereignty.
Rajahs of Kalberga are mentioned by Ferishta as independent princes
when the Deccan was invaded by Alia ud Deeu in a.d. 1295, and on the
establishment of Mahommedan independence in the Deccan in 1347, this
city was made the capital of the new government.
"^
Cambay.
JOURNEY OF ARD-EU-RAZZAK. 7
JOUTIMEY OF AI!1)-1:R-HA//AK. 11
And Moses said unto. Hast thou made a hole therein, that thou mightest
drown those who are on board ? Now hast thou done a strange thing.
He answered, Did I not tell thee that thou couldest not bear with me ?
Moses said, Rebuke me not, because I did forget, and impose not on me
a difficulty in what I am commanded."
—
JOURNEY or ARD-Kll-KAZ/.AK. 13
breeze began to blow, and the vessel floated over the sur-
lace of the water with the rapidity of the wind.^
During several days the realization of this sentence, " Tlicy
have progressed by the help of a favorable wind^'' carried joy
and gladness to the heart of my companions ; and this maxim:
" Ilast thou not seen the ships ride over the sea by the good-
ness of God^'' opened the gate of joy in the hearts of my
friends. Finally, after a voyage of eighteen days and as
this city, that the most wealthy merchants bring thither from
maritime countries considerable cargoes, which they un-
load, and unhesitatingly send into the markets and the
bazaars, without thinking in the meantime of any necessity
of checking the account or of keeping watch over the goods.
The officers of the custom-house take upon themselves the
charge of looking after the merchandise, over which they
keep watch day and night. When a sale is effected, they
levy a duty on the goods of one-fortieth part ; if they are not
sold, they make no charge on them whatsoever.
In other ports a strange practice is adopted. When a
vessel sets sail for a certain point, and suddenly is driven by
a decree of Divine Providence into another roadstead, the
inhabitants, under the pretext that the wind has driven it
king. His message was to the effect that the king must refrain
from interfering with the kingdom of Bengal, in default of
which he might take the responsibility to himself of whatever
the consequence should be. The prince of Djounah-pour
having received this summary ultimatum, gave up all idea
of an attack upon the country of Bengal.
As soon as the sovereign of Calicut was informed of these
occurrences, he prepared some presents, consisting of objects
of value of different kinds, and sent an ambassador charged
wath a despatch, in which he said :
" In this port, on every
Friday and every solemn feast day, the Khotbah^ is cele-
adopt it.
JOURNEY OF ABD-RIl-RAZZAK. 17
sister's son who succeeds him, and his inheritance does not
belong to his son, or his brother, or any other of his rela-
tions. No one reaches the throne by means of the strong
hand.
The Infidels are divided into a great number of classes,
such as the Bramins, the Djoghis,^ and others. Although
they are all agreed upon the fundamental principles of
polytheism and idolatry, each sect has its peculiar customs.
Amongst them there is a class of men, with whom it is the
practice for one woman to have a great number of husbands,
each of whom undertakes a special duty and fulfils it. The
hours of the day and of the night are divided between them
each of them for a certain period takes up his abode in the
house, and while he remains there no other is allowed to
enter. The Sameri belongs to this sect.
The people of this cast do not burn, but bury their dead, and the women
are sometimes buried alive with their husband's corpse." —Forbes'a
" Hindustani Dictionary."
* 3
18 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
guished friends.
Thanks he to God loe are not dead, and we have seen our
very dear friends ; toe have also attained the object of our
desires.
me with joy.
Although, in general, dreams are but the simple wander-
ings of the imagination, which are seldom realized in our
JOURNEY OK AHD-KR-llAZZAK. 19
these parts, that the inhabitants take its dung when dry and
rub their foreheads with it.
heaven itself looks down upon this beautiful spot with plea-
sure and admiration. All the ground of this parterre, all
they seem to form but one single slab of stone, and look like
height.
Since that its head shot up toivards the shies, that vault,
previously without stones in it, now seems formed of them.
Since that its stoiies have rubbed themselves against the sun,
the gold of that orb has taken a purer allotj.
All the other buildings, great and small, are covered
with paintings and sculptures of extreme delicacy. In this
dence.
The preceding details, forming a close narrative of events,
have shown to readers and writers that the chances of a
maritime voyage had led Abd-er-Razzak, the author of this
lak (1,100,000).
JOUKNKY OF AlU)-Krv-l! A/ZAK. 23
These are fixed one beside the other, in such a manner that
no horse or foot soldier could boldly or Avith ease approach
the citadel. If any one would wish to find what point of
resemblance this fortress and rampart present with that
which him picture to himself
exists in the city of Herat, let
which extends
that the first citadel corresponds with that
from the mountain of Mokhtar and Direh dou Buraderim
(the Valley of the Two Brothers) as far as the banks of the
river and the bridge of Malan, situated east of the town of
Ghinan, and west of the village of Sa'iban.
The space which separates the first fortress from the second,
and up to the third fortress, is filled with cultivated fields,
and with houses and gardens. In the space from the third
to the seventh one meets a numberless crowd of people,
many shops, and a bazaar. At the gate of the king's palace
are four bazaars, placed opposite each other. On the north
is the portico of the jDalace of the rai. Above each bazaar
is a lofty arcade with a magnificent gallery, but the audience
hall of the king's palace is elevated above all the rest. The
bazaars are extremely long and broad. The rose merchants
place before their shops high estrades, on each side of which
they expose their floAvers for sale. In this place one sees a
constant succession of sweet smelling and fresh looking roses.
These people could not live without roses, and they look
upon them as quite as necessary as food.
Each class of men belonging to each profession has shops
matters arc going on, and after tlie lapse of a few minutes
retires. Beliind the king's palace are the house and hall
allotted to the Daiang. To the left of the said palace is the
darah-hlidneh (the mint). In this country they have three
kinds of money, made of gold mixed with alloy : one called
varahah weighs about one mithkal, equivalent to two dinars,
kopeki ; the second, which is called pertah, is the half of the
first ; the third, called fanom, is equivalent in value to the
tenth part of the last-mentioned coin. Of these different
coins the fanom is the most useful. They cast in pure silver
a coin which is the sixth of the fanom, which they call tar.
like basins, filled with bullion, forming one mass. All the
inhabitants of this country, both those of exalted rank and of
an inferior class, down to the artizans of the bazaar, wear
pearls, or rings adorned with precious stones, in their ears,
on their necks, on their arms, on the upper part of the hand,
and on the fingers. Opposite the Divan - Khaneh (the
palace of the council) is the Fil-Khaneh (the house of the
elephants).
Although the king possesses a considerable number of
elephants in his dominions, the largest of these animals are
kept near the palace, in the interior of the first and second
fortress, between the north and the west. These elephants
copulate, and bring forth young. The king possesses one
JOUHNKY OF Ani)-KR-RA//,AK. 27
salt is thrown on it, and fresh sugar is sprinkled over it, and
the whole is then mixed well together. They then make
balls of it, weighing about two 'man, and, after steeping them
in butter, they put them into the elephant's mouth. If one
of these ingredients has been forgotten, the elephant attacks
his keeper, and the king punishes this negligence severely.
These animals take this food twice a day.
Each elephant has a separate compartment, the walls of
which are extremely solid, and the roof composed of strong
pieces of wood. The neck and the back of these animals are
bound with chains, the end of which is strongly fastened to
the top of the roof. If they were fixed otherwise, the ele-
phant would easily undo them : the fore feet also are held
by chains.
The mode of catching the elephant is as follows. On the
road which the animal takes when he goes to drink, they dig
a trench, and cover the mouth of it over, but very lightly.
When an elephant falls into it, two or three days are allowed
to elapse before any one goes near him. At the end of that
time a man comes and strikes the animal with several blows
of a stick well applied : upon this another man shows him-
self, and violently drives away the man who struck the
blows, and, seizing his stick, hurls it a great way off; after
which has escaped from the net of the hunter), took up with
his trunk a block of wood like a beam, placed it before him
at short distances, on the surface of the ground, as he pro-
ceeded ; and thus testing the road, he reached the watering
place. The keepers of the elephant had lost all hope of
retaking him, and yet the king had a very strong desire to
gain possession of this animal again. One of the keepers hid
himself in the branches of a tree under which the elephant
had to pass. At the moment when the elephant came up,
this man threw himself upon the back of the animal, who
still had about his body and chest one of the thick cords
with which the elephants are bound. This cord he laid
strong hold of. Do what the elephant would to shake him-
self and twist about, and to strike blows with his trunk both
right and left, he could not get free. He rolled himself on
his side, but every time he did so the man leapt cleverly to
the opposite side, and at the same time gave him some heavy
blows upon the head. At length the animal, worn out, gave
up the contest, and surrendered his body to the chains and
his neck to the fetters. The keeper led the elephant into
the presence of the king, who rewarded him with a noble
generosity.
Even the sovereigns of Hindoostan take part in hunting
the elephant. They remain a whole month, or even more,
in the desert or in the jungles, and when they have taken
any of these animals they are very proud of it. Sometimes
they cause criminals to be cast under the feet of an elephant.
JOURNEY OF AI!1)-KU-UAZZ.\K. 29
that the animal may crush them to pieces with his knees, his
trunk, and his tusks. The merchants who trade in elephants
j^o to seek them in the island of Ceylon, and export them to
different countries, where they sell them according to the
frame was thin, and he Avas rather tall ; on his cheeks might
be seen a slight down, but there was no beard on his chin.
The expression of his countenance was extremely pleasing.
On being led into the presence of this prince I bowed my
head three times. The monarch received me with interest,
and made me take a seat very near him. When he took the
august letter of the emperor, he handed it to the interpreter
and said :
" My heart is truly delighted to sec that a great
king has been pleased to send me an ambassador." As the
humble author of this narrative, in consequence of the heat,
and the great number of robes in which he was dressed, was
drowned in perspiration, the monarch took pity upon him,
and sent him a fan, similar to the khata which he held in his
hand. After this a salver was brought, and they presented
to the humble author tAvo packets of betel, a purse contain-
ing five hundred y^wows, and twenty tnithkah^ of camphor.
Then, receiving permission to depart, he returned to his
house. Hitherto his provisions had been brought him daily,
consisting of two sheep, four pair of fowls, five 7nan^ of rice,
one of butter, one of sugar, and two varahahs of gold ; and
they continued supplying him regularly with the same arti-
cles. Twice in the week, at the close of day, the king sent
for him, and put questions to him respecting his majesty,
^ The name both of a weight and a coin, the value of which has much
changed. Its present weight is about three pennyweights.
^ M. Langl^s, in his note on this passage says, that as the author has
not specified the mann to which he refers, it is impossible to fix its value.
There are more than ten sorts in Persia and India. If the market
" mann" is meant, it weighs about seven pounds and a half.
32 INDIA IN THE riFTEENTH CENTURY.
harem. From that moment nobody sees her, but she enjoys
the highest consideration.
JOURNEY OF AUn-KR-UAZZAK. 33
During the time that the author of this narrative was still
The king's brother, who had had a new house built for
himself, invited thither the monarch and the principal per-
sonages of the empire. Now it is the established usage of the
infidels never to eat in presence of each other. The men who
were invited were assembled together in one grand hall. At
short intervals the prince either came in person, or sent some
messenger to say, that such or such great personage should
come and eat his part of the banquet. Care had been taken
to bring together all the drums, kettle-drums, trumpets, and
flutes that could be found in the city, and these instruments
playing all at the same time, made a tremendous uproar. As
soon as the individual who had been sent for entered the
above-mentioned house, two assassins, placed in ambush,
sprang out upon him, pierced him with a poignard, and cut
him in pieces. After having removed his limbs, or rather the
fragments of his body, they sent for another guest, who, once
having entered this place of carnage, disappeared, like those
who have set out upon the journey of the life to come, never
to return ; and the language of fate seemed to address to
Tliou shah not return any more. When thou hast taken
thy departure, it is for ever.
whom the secret was entrusted, was aware of what was going
34 INDIA IN IIIK FlFTKENTTl CENTIRY.
on. In this manner all those who had any name or rank in
the state were slaughtered. The prince, leaving his house
all reeking with the blood of his victims, betook himself
to the king's palace, and addressing himself to the guards
who were stationed in that royal residence, invited them
with flattering words to go to his house, and caused them to
prince fell at the back of his throne. The traitor thus be-
lieving that the king was dead, left there one of his con-
fidants to cut off the monarch's head, then going out of the
hall, he ascended to the portico of the palace, and thus ad-
dressed the people :
" I have slain the king, his brothers,
view.
In the front of this place rose a palace with nine pavilions,
magnificently ornamented. In the ninth the king's throne
was set up. In the seventh was allotted a place to the
humble author of this narrative, from which every one was
excluded excepting the author's friends. Between the
palace and the pavilions, in an extremely beautiful situa-
tion, were musicians and storytellers, who sang and in-
country.
Before the throne was a square cushion, on the edges of
which were sewn three rows of j^earls of the most beautiful
water. During the three days the king remained seated on
this cushion behind the throne. When the fete of jNIahanadi
was ended, at the hour of evening prayer, the monarch sent
to summon me. On my arrival at the palace I was introduced
in the midst of four estrades, which were about ten ghez both
in length and in breadth. The roof and the walls were en-
tirely formed of plates of gold, enriched with precious stones.
.TOITRNKY OV Ain)-KI{-KAZ/AK. 39
But vhy speak of the emir and the vizier ? It came even
to the Jiinrj.
.TOrUNKY OF ARD-KR-RAZZAK. 41
sufficient.
If, ivhen once I have escaped from the desert of thy love,
sion to " hold the equinoctial line under the line of his
authority," is perfectly correct.
The humble author of this work, after having completed
his ncgociations, set forth on his journey, and directed his
homeward course towards the shores of the sea of Oman.
" God is the friend of those who hold the true faith : He
tvill bring them forth fr 0771 the darhiess, and will lead them
fo7'ih i7ito the light.''''
and confidence.
The duration of the night was longer than that of the day,
— :
With a heart full of energy, and with vast hopes, T set out
on my journey, or rather, I committed myself to the good-
ness and compassion of God. On the twelfth day of the
month of Schahan [Nov. 5th, 1443], accompanied by the am-
bassadors, I left the city of Bidjanagar to commence my jour-
ney. After travelling eighteen days, on the first day of the
month Hamaza^i [Nov. Sord, 1443], I reached the shores
of
of the sea of Oman and the port of Maganor. There I had
the honour of being admitted to the society of the Sheriff-
Emir Seid-Ala-eddin-Meskhedi, who was a hundred and
twenty years old. For many years he had been an object of
veneration both to Mussulmans and idolaters. Throughout
the country his words were regarded as oracles, and no one
ventured to object to his decisions.
spot our head ivill rest heneath the brink of the tomb !
" Fearnothing ,for thou hast been preserved from the hand
of unjust men.'"
Struck with the coincidence of this passage w^ith my situ-
ation, I felt all those anxieties disappear from my heart, which
had caused me alarm in the prospect of encountering the sea.
Abandoning myself entirely to the hope of a happy deliver-
ance, I embarked on the eighth day of the month of Zu'lka-
dah [Jan. 28th, 1444] and put to sea. While the vision of
those ships which float over the mountain-like waves of the sea,
presented to my thoughts the traces of the Divine power, at
the same time, in the conversation of the companions of my
voyage, I collected observations respecting remarkable names
and facts worthy of note, and throughout our little company
peace and contentment prevailed.
The eye of sad events and of misfortunes loas gone to sleep.
Fortune appeared to have given herself up to indolence, and
we loere surrounded with happiness.
The ship, after a million of shocks, reached the open
sea.
The night, the vessel, the wind, and the gulf, presented to
our minds all the forebodings of a catastrophe. On a sud-
den, through the effect of the contrary winds, which resem-
bled men in their drink, the wine which produced^ this
change penetrated even to the vessel. The planks of which
itwas composed, and which by their conformation seemed
to form a continuous line, were on the point of becoming
^ Poetically speaking.
46 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
" The loaves cover it, tJie hilloio rises beneath it, and above
it is the cloud."
The sailor who, with respect to his skill in swimming,
might be compared to a fish, was anxious to throw himself
into the water like an anchor. The captain, although fami-
liarized with the navigation of all the seas, shed bitter tears,
and had forgotten all his science. The sails were torn, the
mast was entirely bent by the shock of the wind. The dif-
the atmosphere, that even the bird of rapid flight was burnt
up in the heights of heaven, as well as the fish in the depths
of the sea. I re-embarked and set sail from the port of
Jurufgan, and reached Ormuz on the forenoon of Friday,
the eighth day of the month of Safar [April 22nd, 1444].
Our voyage from the port of Honawer to Ormuz had lasted
^
sixty-^t;e days.
' Oaore.
THE TUAVELS
^ This refers to a story related by Pliny {Hist. Nat., lib. vi, cap. 22),
to the eifect that a freedmau of one Anuius Plocamus, being overtaken
by a tempest when oiF the coast of Arabia, was, after being tossed about
for a fortnight, driven on shore at Hypuros, in the island of Taprobana.
The king of this island, having questioned the freedman respecting the
Romans, was so much struck by his answers that he became desirous of
their friendship, and forthwith desijatched ambassadors to Rome. The
description given by these ambassadors of their island of Taprobana is
inserted by Pliny in his history, and forms the twenty-second chapter
of the sixth book.
THE TRAVELS OF NICOLO CONTI. O
through the centre of the city, the two parts of which are
connected together by a single bridge of fourteen arches,
with strong towers at both ends. Many monuments and
foundations of buildings of the ancient city are still to be
seen. In the upper part of the city there is a very strong
fortress, and also the royal palace.
Sailing hence for the space of twenty days down the river,
in which he saw many noble and cultivated islands, and then
travelling for eight days through the country, he arrived at
a city called Balsera,^ and in four days' journey beyond at the
Persian Gulf, where the sea rises and falls in the manner of
the Atlantic Ocean. Sailing through this gulf for the space
of five days he came to the port of Colcus, and afterwards to
Ormuz (which is a small island in the said gulf), distant
from the mainland twelve miles. Leaving this island and
turning towards India for the space of one hundred miles, he
emporium of
arrived at the city of Calacatia, a very noble
the Persians. Here, having remained for some time, he
learned the Persian language, of which he afterwards made
great use, and also adopted the dress of the country, which
he continued to wear during the whole period of his travels.
sand miles in circumference. The men are cruel and their cus-
toms brutal. The ears both of the men and women are very
large, in which they wear earrings ornamented with precious
stones. Their garments are made of linen and silk, and
hang down to their knees. The men marry as many wives
as they please. Their houses are extremely low, in order to
that of cheese.
In one part of the island called Batech, the inhabitants eat
human flesh, and are in a state of constant warfare with their
neighbours.'^ They keep human heads as valuable property,
for when they have captured an enemy they cut off his head,
and having eaten the flesh, store up the skull and use it for'
^ Durio ZiletJdnus, L., one of the most highly esteemed fruits of the
being in the middle of it, you cannot see land on either side.
He asserts that in some places it is fifteen miles in width.
the space of three months, leaving behind him four very fa-
mous cities, and landed at an extremely powerful city called
Maarazia, where there is a great abundance of aloe wood,
gold, silver, precious stones, and pearls. From thence he
took the route towards some mountains situated towards the
east, for the purpose of procuring those precious stones
called carbuncles, which are found there. Having spent
thirteen days on this expedition, he returned to the city of
Cernove, and thence proceeded to Buffetania. Departing
thence he arrived, at the end of a month's voyage, at the
mouth of the river Racha,^ and navigating up the said river,
he came in the space of six days to a very large city called
by the same name as the river, and situated upon the bank
thereof.
Quitting this city he travelled through mountains void of
noble than all the others, called Ava, and the circumference
of Avhich is fifteen miles.
phants into the woods, where they are left until the wild
male elephants seek them ; the female then gradually with-
draws, feeding, into a place set apart for this purpose, sur-
rounded by a wall and furnished with two large doors, one
for the entrance and another for exit. When the elephant
perceives the female to be there and enters by the first door
to come to her, she, as soon as she sees him, runs out through
him he runs furiously at him to kill him, while the men be-
hind throw the nooses over his hind feet as he raises them,
and then drawing the cords tight fasten them to a pole fixed
into the ground, and leave the elephant there for three or
others.
It is also related by Nicolo, that in other parts they tame
them thus. They drive the elephants into a small valley
enclosed on all sides, and having removed the females they
leave the males shut up there, and tame them by hunger.
At the end of four days they drive them thence and conduct
them to narrow places constructed for the purpose, and there
make them gentle. The kings purchase these for their own
use. The tame elephants are fed upon rice and butter, and
the wild ones eat branches of trees and grass. The tame
elephants are governed by one man, who guides them with
an iron hook, which is applied to the head. This animal is
The men of this country are satisfied with one wife ; and
all the inhabitants, as well men as women, puncture their
flesh with pins of iron, and rub into these punctures pig-
ments which cannot be obliterated, and so they remain
painted for ever. All worship idols : nevertheless when
they rise in the morning from their beds they turn towards
the east, and with their hands joined together say, " God in
Trinity and His law defend us."
In this country there is a kind of apple, very similar to a
called tal,~ the leaves of which are extremely large, and upon
which they write, for throughout all India they do not use
paper excepting in the city of Cambay. This tree bears
fruit like large turnips, the juice contained under the bark
becoming solid, forms very agreeable sweet food.
This country produces frightful serpents^ without feet, as
They also eat a kind of red ant, of the size of a small crab,
arc found white and black bulls, and those arc most prized
which have hair and a tail like that of a horse, but the tail
^ Cathay embraces the northern part of China, but its limits cannot
now be defined.
2 Kanbalu, the ancient name for Peking. See The Travels of Marco '"'
Polo," by Marsden, p. 287, for a full description of " the great and ad-
mirable palace of the Grand Khan, near to the city of Kanbalu," as it was
about one hundred and fifty years before the time when Conti visited
the East.
THE TRAVELS OE NICOEO CONTl. 15
there any wine. And in this place they do not use the grape
for the purpose of making wine. They have pine apples,
oranges, chesnuts, melons, but small and green, white sandal
wood, and camphor. The camphor is found within the tree,
and if they do not sacrifice to the gods before they cut the
bark, it disappears and is no more seen.
In central India there are two islands towards the extreme
confines of the world, both of which are called Java. One
of these islands is three thousand miles in circumference, the
other two thousand. Both are situated towards the east,
* Pegu is the city which corresponds most nearly with this description.
Java was the island now called Bally, while Odoardo Barbosa, in his
9
:
remained here for the space of nine months with his wife and
children, who accompanied him in all his journeys.
account of his travels in India, states that it was called by the natives
Ambaba, probablj the modern Sumbawa. The circumference, however,
as given by Conti (two thousand miles), does nat correspond with either
of these islands, which are extremely small. There can be little doubt
but that Sumatra was sometimes called Java.
;
is not eaten, but the skin and tail arc highly prized, being
used as ornaments for the head.'
At fifteen days' sail beyond these islands eastward, two
others arc found : the one is called Sandai, in which nut-
megs and maces grow the other is named Bandan this ; ;
both kinds of the size of doves : also some white of the size of
hens. These last are called cachi,^ which means the more
excellent : human speech in
they excel in talking, imitating
a wonderful manner, and even answering questions. The
inhabitants of both islands are black. The sea is not navi-
gable beyond these islands, and the stormy atmosphere keeps
navigators at a distance.
Having quitted Java, and taken with him such articles as
^ It is not easy to conjecture what bird is here alluded to. Nicold does
not tell us that he saw the bird alive, and it is therefore possible that it
may be one of the Paradisea, or birds of paradise, the skins of which are
wrapped round a stick and used as ornaments, the feet being preoiously
removed. It is true that the bird of paradise is not a native of Java but
of New Guinea, but these places are sufficiently near to admit of the
skin having been imported into Java.
^ A species of Lorius : so called from the Javanese word loerri or
noerri (the I and n are convertible letters in the Javanese language),
which means a parrot with bright coloured plumage.
' A species of cacatU(X, —the cockatoo : called in tlic Javanese lan-
guage kokilo.
* Quilon ?
'"
Malabar.
18 INDIA IN Till': KU-'TEENTII CENTURY.
flying cats, for they have a pellicle extending from the fore
to the hinder feet and attached to the body, which is drawn
up when they are at rest.^ They fly from tree to tree by ex-
tending their feet and shaking their wings. When pursued
by hunters they fall to the earth when fatigued by flying,
fruit of this tree is sometimes found under the earth in its roots;
these excel the others in flavour, and for this reason it is the
custom to set these apart for royal use. This fruit has no
kernel. The tree is like a large fig tree, tlie leaves being in-
tercised like those of the palm : the wood is equal to box-
Avood, and is therefore much prized for its applicability to
many purposes. The name of this tree is caclii. There is also
another fruit, called amha^ green and resembling very much
a nut, but larger than the nectarine ; the outer rind is bitter,
but within it is sweet like honey : before they are ripe they
steep them in water to remove the acidity, in the same man-
ner as we are in the habit of steeping green olives.
Having quitted Coloen he arrived, after a journey of three
days, at the city Cocym.' This city is five miles in circum-
ference, and stands at the mouth of a river, from which it
derives its name. Sailing for some time in this river he saw
many fires lighted along the banks, and thought that they
were made by fishermen. But those who were with him in
the ship exclaimed, smiling, ''
Icepe, Icepe." These have
the human form, but may be called either fishes or monsters,
which, issuing from the water at night, collect wood, and
procuring fire by striking one stone against another, ignite it
and burn it near the water ; the fishes, attracted by the light,
here who are called bachari, who only marry one wife. The
wife by law, burnt with the body of her husband. These
is,
priests do not eat any animal food, but live upon rice, milk,
the women, and sometimes the women pass over to the men,
and each return to their own respective islands before the
expiration of six months. Those who remain on the island
of the others beyond this fatal period die immediately. De-
parting hence, he sailed in five days to Aden, an opulent
city, remarkable for its buildings. He then sailed over to
jl^thiopia, where he arrived in seven days, and anchored in
a port named Barbora. He then, after sailing for a month,
hmded at a port in the Red Sea called Gidda,^ and subse-
quently near Mount Sinai, having spent two months in
reaching this place from the Red Sea, on account of the dif-
ficulty of the navigation. He afterwards travelled through
the desert to Carras,^ a city of Egypt, with his wife and four
children and as many servants. In this city he lost his
wife, and two of his children, and all his servants by the
plague. At length, after so many journeys by sea and land,
he arrived in safety at his native country, Venice, with his
two children.
In answer to my inquiries respecting the manner and cus-
toms of the Indians, he spoke as follows :
back of their head with a silken cord, and let it flow over
their shoulders, and way go to war. They have bar-
in this
bers like ourselves. The men resemble Europeans in stature
and the duration of their lives. They sleep upon silken mat-
trasses, on beds ornamented with gold. The style of dress
is different in different regions. Wool is very little used.
There is great abundance of flax and silk, and of these they
make their garments. Almost all, both men and women,
wear a linen cloth bound round the body, so as to cover the
front of the person, and descending as low as the knees, and
over this a garment of linen or silk, which, with the men,
descends to just below the knees, and with the women to the
ankles. They cannot wear more clothing on account of the
great heat, and for the same reason they only wear sandals,
with purple and golden ties, as we see in ancient statues. In
THE TRAVELS OF NICOLO CONTI. 23
hortation of the priest she then springs into the fire. If some
show more timidity (for it frequently happens that they be-
come stupified by terror at the sight of the struggles of the
thrown
others, or of their sufferings in the fire), they are
into the fire by the bystanders, whether consenting or not.
Their ashes are afterwards collected and placed in urns,
which form an ornament for the sepulchres.
The dead are mourned for in various ways. The natives
of central India cover up even their heads. Some set up
poles in the highways, with painted and cut paper hanging
TIIK TRAVKLS OF NICOI.O CX)N'JI. 25
from the top to the ground. They sound gongs for three
days, and give food to the poor for the love of God. Otliers
mourn for three days, the members of the family and all
gods that they should quit this life for their sake. Many
present themselves who have determined upon self immola-
tion, having on their neck a broad circular piece of iron, the
fore part of which is round and the hinder part extremely
sharp. A chain attached to the fore part hangs suspended
upon the breast, into which the victims, sitting down with
!^8 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY,
their Icf^s drawn up and their neck bent, insert their feet.
—
may be crushed to death, a mode of death which they say
is very acceptable to their god. Others, making an incision
in their side, and inserting a rope thus through their body,
hang themselves to the chariot by way of ornament, and thus
suspended and half dead accompany their idol. This kind
of sacrifice they consider the best and most acceptable of all.
passers by, even the king and queen themselves, with saf-
oxen, which they drive to the top, and having cut them into
pieces, cast the warm and bleeding fragments upon the sum-
mit of" the other mountain, by means of machines which they
construct for that purpose. The diamonds stick to these
themselves have two eyes and that we have but one, because
they consider that they excel all others in prudence." The
inhabitants of Cambay alone use paper ; all other Indians
write on the leaves of trees, of which they make very beau-
tiful books. But they do not write as we or the Jews do,
from left to right or right to left, but perpendicularly, car-
rying the line from the top to the bottom of the page. There
aremany languages and dialects in use among the Indians.
They have a vast number of slaves, and the debtor who is
insolvent is everywhere adjudged to be the property of his
creditor.
to which were attached the hair from the backs of the heads
of the dead. He added, moreover, that he was sometimes
present at their battles, as a spectator, but without taking
any part in them, and being recognized by both parties as a
stranger escaped unhurt.
The island of Java, called Major, produces a tree of great
rarity, in the middle of which there is found an iron rod,
very thin and as long as the trunk of a tree. He who
carries about him a small piece of this iron rod, so that
itmay touch his flesh, is invulnerable by iron, and for this
They asserted that the Nile took its rise near the equi-
TRAVKI.S OF N1C0L5 CONTl. 35
swollen rivers
of March, April, and May, only, by which the
that the water of the
cause the Nile to rise and overflow ;
difficulty experienced
was said to writing, on account of the
36 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
val occasions. The leaves of the tree are from one to two
cubits in length.
The Nile is unnavigable as far as the island of Meroe, on
account of the frequent falls through masses of rugged rock.
Beyond Meroe, it is navigable as far as Egypt, but they say
that the journey occupies six months, in consequence of the
numerous sinuosities of the river. Those who inhabit the
regions in which the Nile takes its source see the sun to-
wards the north, but in the month of March it is beheld
directly over their heads. In all Ethiopia there is but one
written alphabet, but, owing to the size of the provinces,
there are different languages. Some of them reported that
the maritime region towards India produced ginger, cloves,
sugar, and nuts, which are called muscatce} There are
deserts between Ethiopia and Egypt fifty days' journey in
extent, over which food and drink are carried by camels.
The road across is infested in many places by wild Arabs,
who are scattered about and wander through the desert
naked like wild beasts, riding on camels, the flesh and milk
of which they use for food. They rob travellers of their
camels, food, and drink ; and this is the reasonwhy so many
perish of hunger, and the number of those who succeed in
reaching us so few.
The Ethiopians are much longer lived than we are, for
gold and silver than we do ; the men wear rings, the women
wear armlets enriched with various precious stones. The
period from Christmas to Lent is kept by them as a festival,
^ Sanga or Galla oxen, described and figured by Salt in his " Voyage
to Abyssinia," pp. 258, 259. The horns mentioned by him as being in
the collection of Lord Valentia, are now in the British Museum.
38 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
and that its feet resemble those of the camel : it has two
horns, very sharp at the extremity, one cubit in length, one
of which is situate on the forehead and the other on the
nose/ They have another animal called zehed, rather longer
than a hare, and resembling it in other respects -^ possessing
such a peculiar odour, that if it lean against a tree for the
purpose of scratching itself, it imparts to it a smell so ex-
tremely sweet, that persons passing near shortly afterwards
and guided by the scent, cut out the part against which it
with cloven hoofs like those of an ox, the body not more
than a cubit in thickness, with hair very like to that of a
ATHANASIUS NIKITIN,
OF TWER.
VOYx\GE TO INDIA.
son of Nikita.
This is, as I wrote it, my sinful wandering beyond the
three seas : the first, the sea of Derbend — Doria Khvalits-
kaia;^ the second, the India Sea — Doria Hondustanskaia ;
lection of tolls, duties, and customs, which were numerous and oppres-
sive during the dominion of the Tartars.
* Probably a traveller of some distinction, but whose character is not
disclosed.
® This was the ambassador of Shirvanshah, whose dominions extended
:
TRAVELS OF NJKITIN.
on the western shores of the Caspian Sea, forming the present Shirvan.
Those princes, in the reign of Iwan III, ceased to be the oppressors of
Russia, and, in many instances, appeared as affectionate allies of that
sovereign. Hence the present of ninety falcons, which may be con-
sidered as a mark of courtesy, which Ivan III not only paid to his
Tartar allies, but also to the Roman emperor Maximilian. Karamsin iii,
333-34.
^ Kazan, until 1552, was the capital of an independent Tartar king-
doms that sprung up from the immense empire of Baty in the beginning
of the fifteenth century as the Zolotaia Orda (golden or great orda),
;
its waters into the Caspian Sea, it runs north to the main arm of the river.
6 INDIA IN THE FIFTKENTH CENTURY.
cover their goods, for these people are sent in my name. And
shouldest thou ever want any thing of me, do thou name it,
^
The Kaitaks, or Tartar tribe that occupied the preseut Daghestau.
^ Tarki, atown of Daghestau, uot far from the Caspian Sea.
;
TRAVELS OF NIKITIN. i
the capital of the Parthian kings, where Alexander halted for five days
in his pursuit of Darius. The ruins cover a great extent of ground,
having in their centre a modern village with a noble mosque and mauso-
—
leum, an oasis in the midst of the surrounding desert (Macculloch,
Geogr. Diet., Teheran). With regard to the curse alluded to, we find in
Olearius, Voyages, etc., 678 (translated by De Wicquefort, two
liv. iv, p.
vols., folio, Leide, 1718), who visited that country in 1G37, the following
every year and the children are many and men and women ;
Jooneer and lived there two months ; but day and night for
four months there is but rain and dirt. At this time of the
year the people till the ground, sow wheat, tuturegan(?),
peas, and all sorts of vegetables. Wine is kept in large
skins (?) of Indian goat. (Unintelligible). . . .
and these are used for riding, conveying goods, and every
other purpose.
Jooneer stands on a stony island ; no human hand built it
^ Viz., in June.
TRAVELS OF NIKITIN. 11
^ This sentence is not clear, and as it stands thus in the original, I did
not venture to put on it any construction to explain the author's mind,
the more so as the latter part of the sentence is left out in Mr. Stroef's
impression. (Count Wielhorsky.)
2 15th of August.
;
And all are black and wicked, and the women all harlots,
there the man will die ; and whoever attempts to kill it, will
see fire flashing from its beak. AVild cats rove at night and
catch fowls ; they live in the hills and among stones. As to
monkeys they live in the woods and have their monkey kniaz,
who is attended by a host of armed followers. When any
of them is caught they complain to their kniaz, and an army
is sent after the missing ; and when they come to a town
they pull down the houses and beat the people ; and their
armies, it is said, are many. They speak their own tongues
and bring forth a great many children and, when a child
;
Thibet, the Shiekh FatalOddin> This saint treated him with attention,
and placed on him at parting the fine goat's hair garment which he
wore himself. (Cooley, i, 203.) Might he not be the same in whose
memory everything was bought and sold at the Aladinand bazaar.
'
The belief that these animals are but a variety of the human species,
already existed among the Greeks of antiquity. Ibn Batuta informs us
that he found the same belief established among pious and credible
persons in India. was assured that the monkeys have a chief, whom
lie
they treat as if he were a king, four monkeys with rods in their hands
being constantly in waiting upon him, and supplying his table with all
ftunJ"'^""^
The sultan goes out hunting with his mother and his lady,
and a train of 10,000 men on horseback, 50,000 on foot
200 elephants adorned in gilded armour, and in front one
hundred horn-men, 100 dancers, and 300 common horses in
golden clothing,100 monkeys, and 100 concubines, all
foreign (haurikies).
The sultans Xhc sultau's palacc has seven o-ates, and in each sfate are
seated 100 guards and 100 Mahommedan scribes, who enter
the names of all persons going in and out. Foreigners are
not admitted into the town. This palace is very wonderful
everything in it is carved or gilded, and, even to the smallest
^ The kouteval, like the police of our days, had to keep good order in
the streets, especially during the night. Olearius, in describing the
authorities of the city of Gomron, or Bunder Abbas (
Voyages du Sr.
Jean A. Mandehlo, inbhlies par A. Olearius et traduits par De Wicque-
fort, 2 vols., folio. Vol. i, p. .32), says, that the kouteval performed the
duties of a chevalier du fftcet, or night guard. In the kingdom of
Guzerat, according to the same authority (pp. 152, 153), his duty was
also to decide petty suits, " But justice," remarks Olearius, " is adminis-
tered there in a curious manner ; for the person that begins the suit
usually wins it, and the consequence is that in most cases it is the sufferer
has to pay the fine. The judged by the governors of
capital crimes are
the cities, the executions devolving on the kouteval. There is almost
no crime from which you may not be redeemed by money so that it ;
may be said of those countries, with more truth than of any other, that
gibbets are erected there for the poor only. The crimes most severely
punished are murder and adultery, especially when committed with a
lady of high station. This is the only reason why houses of pleasure are
which pay a tribute to the kouteval, who in return extend
tolerated, all of
to them such an efficient protection that they not only afford security,
but also confer a certain amount of honour on their customers.
14
16 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTUHY.
Bdigious
creeds.
tliiiiffs
o :
^
iior cUd thcv
j
try to hide their women.
j
And I
asked them all about their religion, and they said :
" We
believe in Adam ;" and they hold the Budhs to be Adam
and his race. There are in all eighty-four creeds, and all
^fPenot-"'
Having spent four months at Beder, I agreed with some
turn.
Hindoos to go to Pervota^ which is their Jerusalem ; its
the deeds of Boot. All around it are cut out twelve wreaths,
in which are shown how Boot achieved miracles ; how he
appeared in different forms ; first in the shape of a man,
then as a man with an elephant's nose, then as a man with
a monkey's face, and again as a man with the appearance of
a savage beast and a tail rising a sajen (seven feet) above him.
People from all parts of the land of India congregate at
Bootkhana, to witness the wonders of Boot. Old women and
girls shave their hair at Bootkhana, and everyone coming
there shaves his beard and head and whatever hair is on his
body ; and a tribute of two mekshenics is levied on each
head for the sake of Boot, and also of iowx fonties on each
horse. Twenty millions of people assemble at Bootkhana,
but sometimes a hundred millions.
At Bootkhana, Boot is sculptured in stone of an immense
size, his tail rising over him. His right hand is lifted up
high and extended like that of Justian (Justinian?), emperor
of Constantinople ; his left holding a sword ; he is quite
uncovered, with only a small cloth round the loins, and has
the appearance of a monkey. Some other budhs (idols) are
In travelling every one has a stone pot to cook his broth in.
They take care that Mahommedans do not look into their pot,
nor see their food, and should this happen they will not eat
it ; some, therefore, hide themselves under a linen cloth lest
They sit down to eat, and wash their hands and feet, and
rinse their mouths before they do so.
The bodies of the dead are burnt, and the ashes scattered
on the waters.
When a woman is confined, her husband acts the midwife.
The Hindoos call the hxxW. father , and the cow mother ; with
their excrements they bake bread and boil food, and with
their ashes sign the images of these animals on their own
faces, foreheads, and whole bodies.
On Sundays and Mondaysthey only eat once in the day.
In India " pachektur a uchu zeder sikish ilarsen ikishitel
akechany ilia atyrsen a tie jetelber bularadastor akul kara-
vash uchuz charfuna khubbem funa khubesia kap karaam
chuk-kichi khosh."^
From Pervota we returned to Beder, a fortnight before
the great Mahommedan festival (Ulu Bairam). But I know
not the great day of Christ's Resurrection ; however, I guess
by different signs, that the great Christian day is by nine or
ten days sooner than the Mahommedan Cagrim (Cairiam).
I have nothing with me ; no books whatever ; those that I
had taken from Russia were lost when I was robbed. And
I forgot the Christian faith and the Christian festivals, and
know not Easter nor Christmas, nor can I tell Wednesday
from Friday, and I am between the two faiths. But I pray
to the only God that he may preserve me from destruction.
God is one, king of glory and creator of heaven and earth.
damask, khan,^ kiota,* and there they prepare the blue stone
colour. There also grows lek daakliyh dalon.
1 The distances in days between Degh, Muscat, and Guzerat are given
in Stroef s edition, but not in this manuscript.
2 Long gowns, still worn by Tartars, of a striped material, half cotton
half silk.
"^
A sort of satin from China. * Blankets.
20 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
cheap.
Pegu. Pegu is no inconsiderable port, principally inhabited by
^ A sort of mastich, used for shaving (?).
^ The tankha appears to be the coin represented by the modern rupee,
and, perhaps, when at its proper standard, was of about the same value.
The rupee of Akbar (sixteenth century) contained 174"5 grains of pure
silver, and was divided into forty dams or pusas (of 191^ grains of
of his time. Akbar's standard remained almost unaltered all over the
Mogul dominions until the breaking up of the empire, in the middle of
the last century. (The Hon. M. Elphinstone's History of India, book
viii, chap, ii, note 19.) Hence the value of one tenka at the latter part
of the fifteenth century may be fixed at about two shillings.
— —;
TRAVELS OF NIKITIN. 21
they go to the foreign men and sleep with them and pay for
but this is not true, for the people of Shabat are neither Jews,
' Orachoor, according to Stroef.
xS; INDIA IN THE P^IFTEENTH CENTURY.
Monkeys and wild cats infest the woods and attack the
traveller on the highroads ; nobody, therefore, attempts to
travel at night, on account of the monkeys and wild cats.
auJdikov.
Musktieer.
There is a kind of deer, which, when fattened, have their
vesicles cut, and a liquid is generated therein. When wild
they drop these vesicles, which give a very strong smell
on the fields and in the woods, and any one attempting to
Four great Lent fastings and four great days (Easter days)
have already passed by, but I, sinful man, do not know
faith.
in steel, and each holding six warriors with guns and long
muskets. The big elephants are mounted by twelve men.
Each animal has two large jirohortsy and a heavy sword,
Aveighing a kentar (three pouds, about 100 lb.), attached to
its tusks, and large iron weights hanging from the trunk. A
man in full armour sits between the ears, holding in his
hand a large iron hook wherewith he guides the animal.
But besides this there may be seen in the train of the
Bultan about a thousand ordinary horses in gold trap-
24 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
^ This may be Gruzia, the present name of that part of the Caucasus
known to Europe as Georgia, a country which by its fertility would
answer to the qualification given to it by our traveller. Stroef 's reading
is Qurmyz, namely Hormuz, which does not seem so good, as the author
down to dinner every day ; but three viziers only are ad-
mitted to his table, and with each vizier fifty people, and
besides one hundred of his household boyars.
Two thousand horses stand in the stables of Melikh
Tuchar, of which one thousand are always saddled and kept
in readiness day and night ; and also one hundred elephants.
His residence is guarded every night by a hundred armed
and carrying each a citadel and four men, the latter armed
with long muskets. With this force Melikh Tuchar went to
20 elephants.
Beder Khan . . . 30,000 horse.
His brother . . . 100,000 foot,
25 elephants.
The Sultan . . . 10,000 horse,
20,000 foot,
10 elephants.
Vozyr-Khan . . . 15,000 horse,
30,000 foot,
10 elephants.
Kutar-Khan . . . 15,000 horse,
40,000 foot,
10 elephants.
Each vizier 10,000 or 15,000 horse and 20,000 foot.
The Indian Ocdonom went out with forty thousand horse,
one hundred thousand foot, forty elephants in full armour,
each carrying four men with long muskets. The sultan
mustered twenty-six viziers, each at the head of ten or fif-
they only took one Indian town, and that at the loss of many
people and treasures.
The Hindoo sultan Kadam is a very powerful prince. He Kciicnaoar.
^ In Stroef, " ten kors", which agrees better with the distance of nine
kors, as given above between Beder and Kalburga.
^ Forts may be the meaning of the Russian word " rogy", as given
in this manuscript. In ytroef it is rov>/, which alteration of a single
letter makes a great difference, the latter meaning " ravines".
30 INDIA IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
third sea, the Black Sea, called in the Persian tongue Doria
Stimbolskia. The wind was fair during the first five days,
but having reached Vonada^ we encountered a heavy north-
ern gale, which drove us back to Trebizond. We lay for
fifteen days at Platana, the weather continuing very bad,
and then we twice attempted to sail and again met with a
* Perhaps Erzeroum.
^ The old name of Theodosia, on the south coast of Crimea.
^ Probably Cape Vona, about one hundred English miles v/est from
Trebizond.
16
6^4 INDIA IN TUK FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
' The fast or eve of St. Philij) is also the eve of Advent, i.e., the 13th
of November.
ACCOUNT OF THE JOURNEY OF HIERONIMO
DI SANTO STEFANO,
A GEXOVESE,
^ The route from Cairo to India thus early described is the same which
has been followed up to very recent times.
4 INDIA IN t;-ie fifteenth century.
right shore of the said sea, distant about a mile from the land,
where is the port of the country of Prester John : the lord
of this island is a Moor. Here we remained two months
and then departed. Sailing through the said sea in the
manner described above more, we saw
for twenty-five days
dry in the sun, and in five or six days it becomes black and
wrinkled as we see it. For the propagation of ginger they
plant a piece of a small fresh root, about the size of a small
JOURNEY OF IIIKKONIIMO J)l SANTO STEFANO. 5
nut, \vliicli at the end of a month grows hirgc the leaf rcscm- :
bk^s that of the wikl lily. The lord of the city is an idolater,
and so likewise are all the people. They worship an ox, or
the sun, and also various idols, which they themselves make.
When these people die they are burnt : their customs and
usages are various ; inasmuch as some kill all kinds of
animals excepting oxen and coavs : if any one were to kill or
wise are his people. There are many trees here of the sort
solicit at the house of the said lord. While we were thus suf-
fering from cold and from heat, w ith many fatigues and hard-
ships, Messer Hieronimo Adorno, who was a man of feeble
constitution, and greatly reduced by these afflictions combined
with an ancient malady which tried him sorely, after fifty-
ceeded, but with great trouble and expense, and I set sail
have been taken away from me. As, however, there was a
8 INDIA IN TlIK FIFTEENTH CENTURY.
cadi in that place wlio was very friendly to me, and who
had some knowledge of the Italian langviage, by the help
of God and his assistance I cleared myself, but not with-
out much expense and trouble. The rubies, as I have said,
were never recovered, nor many other articles of ornament
which I possessed. Whereupon, finding that that was not
a desirable place to stay in, I determined to take my
departure ; and selling all my merchandize, I converted
the value into silk and benzoin, and set sail in a ship to
return to Cambay ; and after being twenty-five days at sea
being about a mile and a half ; and there were seen in them
an infinite number of people, all black and naked, but in
good condition and courteous. They hold the faith of the
Moors, and have a chief who rules over the whole of them.
There are trees growing there which produce the cocoa
nuts of large size. The people live on fish, and a little rice,
^ The original word " dishabitate" is thus rendered, as its more literal
translation would involve a direct contradiction to the concluding clause
of the sentence.
JOURNKY OV IIIKKONIMO 1)1 SANTO STEFANO. It
was at sea sixty days. Having there paid all the dues on
his merchandize which I had brought with me, and left
INDEX.
The large Roman figures in tins Index refer to the individual documents ns they
stand in the work tiius, i refers to Abd er-Raz/.ak
: ii, to Nicolo de' Conti; ;
of the city, 14-17; his interview their trade with India, xiv-xvi
with the sovereign, 18; he sails to Aracan, ii, 10
Mangalor, 20 journey to Bijana- Army of the Sultan of Beder, iii, 14,
;
to 1
;
; ;;
INDEX.
Buddha, account of the religion of, remains there a year and then sails
III, 16, 18 to Tenassarim, 9 voyage up the ;
Camphor, Sindbad's account of, xxxii the discovery of the Cape of Good
Cannibalism, n, 8, 9 Hope, Ixxxix
Cape of Good Hope, discovery of the, Cows, respect paid to, i, 19
Ixxxix
Caste, in, 17 Dabul, in, 20, 30
Cathay, account of the province of, Daiang, Vizier of Bijanagur, i, 35
II, 14 the cities of Cambaleschia
; his expedition to Kalberga, 40
and Nemptai, 15 Dancing girls, i, 37
Ceylon, discovery of, iv account of,; Daralaman, a name given to Ormuz,
II, 7, 8 IV, 5 tomb of Adam at,
; ;
INDKX.
Fan palm, size of the leaves, ii, 7, 13 Pliny's account of the route to In-
Festivals, account of, in India, i, 35; dia, vi Ptolemy's description of, ;
Fever, cured by the smoke of Ibex the description of, by Cosmas, xii ;
Genoese, their Indian commerce, xvii of Marco Polo, 1 liii ; of Ibn Ba-
Geomantia, an art practised l^y the tuta, liv-lix ; of Nicol6 de' Conti,
Bnihuiins, ii, 26 Ix-lxvii ; of Abd-er-Razzak, Ixvii-
Georgia, iii, 25 Ixxiv ; of A. Nikitin, Ixxvii-lxxx ;
Ghebers, a resort of, at Baku, iii, 7 of H. de Santo Stefano, Ixxx ; of
Ginger plant, account of, ii, G iv, 4
; Pedro Covilham, Ixxxiv-lxxxvii.
Giraffe, description of the, ii, 38 Journey of Abd-er-Razzdk, ambas-
Gleb, a Russian saint, iii, 4 sador from Shah Rokh to India, i,
Gookook, a wonderful bird, iii, 1 4-13 description of Calicut, 13
; ;
Guzrat, indigo trade at, iii, 21 appearance of the people, 17; trade,
14, 19 account of temples near
;
; ;,
INDEX.
tin's journey from Russia to India, and the people, 14 night watch- ;
the people and their religion, 9-10; gious ordinances, 17-18 coins, 20 ; ;
19 ;
Ormuz, ib. Dabul, Calicut, treatment of prisoners, 29 Hiero-
; ;
'
account of the natives of Calicut, i, Jack tree, ii, 18
17; of Bijanagur, 24 their writ- Java, account of, ii, 15; cruelty of
;
INDEX.
Kariat, great heat at, i, 8-9 thence to Muscat, Gujrat and Cam-
Kazan, iir, 5 bay, ib. his description of Chaoul,
;
Koliasin, convent of the Holy Trinity remarks by, 18, 23 places where ;
Nauruz, Mahometan New Year's day, Payva, A. de, his journey to the East
1,14 with Covilham, Ixxxii
Nestorians, account of the, n, 23 in ; Pearl fishery in the Red Sea, iv, 4
Malabar, n, 7 in Socotra, 20 in
; ; Peas, horses fed on, in, 10
North India, 33 Pegu, III, 20 ; iv, 6
Nikitin, Athanasius, account of the Pekin, account of the city of, il, 14
manuscript of his travels, Ixxiv ;
Pepper trees, description of, xxxiii ;
IS
;
INDEX.
Pestilence unknown among the In- death of his companion, ib. sails ;
Rachoor, a diamond in, 21 hill at, their fondness for children, ii, 18 ;
Red Sea, pearl fishery in, iv, 4 flying serpents, ib. serpents fifty ;
Roses, partiality of the people at Bid- first voyage, xxxi second and ;
Marco Polo's account of it, xxxviii; count of the roc, xxxvii-xl of the ;
Tortoise-shell, churches made of, ii, Writing, Indian modes of, i, 25 ii, 31 ;
33
HAKLUYT SOCIETY.
President.
SIR RODEPJCK IMPEY MUllCUISON, G.C.St.S. F.R.S., D.C.L.
Mem. Imp. Acad. Sc. St. Petersburg, Corr. :Mem. Inst. l''r., &c. Ac.
Vice-Presidents.
The marquis OF LANSDOWNK.
REAK-ADMIR.VI, C. R. DRINKWATEH 13KTIIUNJ:, C.B.
Council.
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F.R.S. R. W. GREY, Esq., M.P.
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DAVID'S. Sir EUSKINF. PKItHY, M.P.
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Sir henry ELLIS, K.H., F.R.S.
i,u,.5r.
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1-
^
Major, Richard Henry, ed.
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