Tractato dele più maravigliose cose e più notabile che si trovino in le parte del mondo
redutte e colte sotto brevita in lo presente compendio del strenuissimo cavalier Ioanne de mandavilla anglico.
Venice, Manfredo Bonelli, 26 January 1505.
Although largely fictitious, the journeys are based upon travellers' tales extant in the fourteenth century and as such are of considerable interest. Purchas considered Sir John Mandeville to be akin to Marco Polo in terms of importance 'the greatest Asian Traveller that ever the World had' (Pilgrimes III, p65). His travels take the reader through Turkey, Armenia, Persia, Tartary, Arabia, India and China, and gave many Europeans their first taste of the Near and Middle East, as well as the East Indies.
Little is known of Mandeville himself, however he claims to be an English knight who travelled between 1322 and 1356, serving under both the Sultan of Egypt and the Great Khan. Although traditionally attributed to Mandeville, in reality the work was an English version of a text known as Itinerarium, of which the original, ascribed to Jean d'Outremeuse, was probably written in Anglo-Norman French. All the pre-1725 editions of Mandeville are scarce, and editions such as this, in a vernacular language, particularly so. We have been able to locate just one other copy, held at the British Library in London.
8vo; title within decorative woodcut border, 4-line decorative woodcut initial to A2, 2-line initials elsewhere, some toning and soiling, small repair to fore-edge of title, bookplate to front pastedown; later full vellum, gilt lettering to spine on brown morocco title-piece, minor worming to extremities and endpapers; collation: A-EE4; ff. [112].
USTC 839970.
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