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England and the Mongols (c. 1260–1330)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2009

Extract

As regards the Mongols, our knowledge of their history, of their customs, of their way of life, our relations with them, England presents an interesting case. We do not know the extent of the material lost on the Continent, but, in this (for the Mongols) remote corner of Europe, (in places safe from their devastation) documentation is to be found. A monk of Saint Albans, the chronicler Matthew Paris who died in 1259, is an important source. He was the only person to preserve Ivo of Narbonne's confession (which reveals that an Englishman was one of the first envoys of the Mongols to King Bela of Hungary), the report of Bishop Peter of Russia given at the council of Lyons in 1245 and information about André of Longjumeau's mission after the council. Incidently, twice at the end of his Chronica Majora, in an entry for the year 1257, Matthew Paris refers to a manuscript concerning ‘Tartarorum immunditias, vitam (spurcissimam) et mores (…) necnon et Assessinorum furorem et superstitionem’. It is the same work which is mentioned by John of Oxnead, in his Chronka under the year 1258, as a written command (mandatum scriptum) sent to Simon de Montfort, containing letters the length of a Psalter, and entitled De vita et moribus Tartarorum (…) et de eorum fortitudine etguerra, et de adquisitionibus which was to be found in the book of Additions. Unfortunately this work has not survived. (Nevertheless it is tempting to see here a mention of William of Rubruck's report of his journey, which has the form of a letter and which was written in 1257, but which has little information about the Assassins. Later another Englishman, the Franciscan friar Roger Bacon († 1294) met William of Rubruck and became interested in the Mongols.)

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 2000

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Footnotes

I wish to thank Dr David Howlett, redactor of the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources, for allowing me to search through the files of the Dictionary and for correcting my English text, all remaining errors being of course mine. I am also grateful to Dr Charles Melville who read my text and made some suggestions.

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21 The earliest known manuscript of William of Rubruck's relation (Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS. No. 181) contains also John of Piano Carpini's.

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38 Cf. Roberg, Burkhard, ”Die Tartaren auf dem 2. Konzil von Lyon 1274”, Annuarium Historic Conciliorum, v (1973). PP 241302Google Scholar.

39 The manuscript was destroyed in the fire of the royal library of Torino in 1904. Cf. Scheler, A., “Notice et extraits de deux manuscrits de la Bibliotheque royale de Turin”, in Le Bibliophile beige, second year(1866), pp. 12 and 2628Google Scholar; Brunel, C., “David d’Ashby auteur meconnu des Fails des Tartares”, Romania, LXXIX (1958), pp. 3946CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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