Works Issued by the Hakluyt SocietyHakluyt Society, 1863 |
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Page i
... took place , and describing men , countries and scenes which he had examined with his own eyes . There is a manifest absence of all attempt at composition . The tale is told with a charming simplicity and all the concise freshness of a ...
... took place , and describing men , countries and scenes which he had examined with his own eyes . There is a manifest absence of all attempt at composition . The tale is told with a charming simplicity and all the concise freshness of a ...
Page xxix
... the sepulchre of their Prophet , as firmly as pious Christians of the Greek rite believe in the fable of the Holy Fire as it is manufactured at Jerusalem . ITY The discussion which took place on this subject between the INTRODUCTION . xxix.
... the sepulchre of their Prophet , as firmly as pious Christians of the Greek rite believe in the fable of the Holy Fire as it is manufactured at Jerusalem . ITY The discussion which took place on this subject between the INTRODUCTION . xxix.
Page xxx
Hakluyt Society. The discussion which took place on this subject between the Captain of the Mamluks and certain Sherifs of the Mosque reveals the renegade's general disbelief in Muhammedanism ; though it may well be doubted whether such ...
Hakluyt Society. The discussion which took place on this subject between the Captain of the Mamluks and certain Sherifs of the Mosque reveals the renegade's general disbelief in Muhammedanism ; though it may well be doubted whether such ...
Page xxxii
... took place between the Sherîf Hazä'a bin Muhammed bin Barakât and his brother Barakât ibn Muhammed , the lord of the Hijâz , wherein the latter was overcome and put to flight , the Egyptian escort seizing all his property , and ...
... took place between the Sherîf Hazä'a bin Muhammed bin Barakât and his brother Barakât ibn Muhammed , the lord of the Hijâz , wherein the latter was overcome and put to flight , the Egyptian escort seizing all his property , and ...
Page xxxiii
... took refuge in Juddah , and Hazä'a entered Meccah with the Egyptian escort ; but the city became much disturbed , outrages and fear increased on the roads , and the pilgrims who had come by sea returned home ; consequently the Hajj was ...
... took refuge in Juddah , and Hazä'a entered Meccah with the Egyptian escort ; but the city became much disturbed , outrages and fear increased on the roads , and the pilgrims who had come by sea returned home ; consequently the Hajj was ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
abundance Aden ancient animals appears Arabia Felix Arabs Archipelago arrived Banghella Barbosa beautiful Bengala Brahmins Calicut called camels Cannanore Canonor captain caravan century Ceylon CHAPTER CONCERNING Christians coast colour companion Crawfurd customs Damascus describes distant district ducats elephants Ethiopia four fruit gold Gulf hand Hijâz hundred Imâm India inhabitants island Java jewels journey killed kind king of Calicut king of Portugal kingdom land latter lord Mahomet Malabar Malacca Malay Mamelukes manner Meccah mentioned merchants miles Moorish Moors mosque mountain Muhammed Muhammedan Mussulman narrative Narsinga native navigate Nestorians Pagans Pegu Persian PINKERTON's Voyages port Portugal Portuguese principal probably quantity Quilon Ralph Fitch RAMUSIO remarks river sail Sanäa says Shâh ships Siam silk situated stones Sultan Sumatra Syria Tarnassari Tenasserim THORNTON'S Gazetteer tion town trade translation traveller tree Varthema vessels visited walls wear Yemen Zaila Zamorin
Popular passages
Page 250 - Che m' avea contristati gli occhi, e 'l petto. Lo bel pianeta, ch' ad amar conforta, Faceva tutto rider l' Oriente, Velando i Pesci, ch' erano in sua scorta. I' mi volsi a man destra, e posi mente All' altro polo, e vidi quattro stelle Non viste mai, fuor ch
Page 202 - Birman nobility is very becoming ; it consists of a long robe either of flowered satin or velvet, reaching to the ankles, with an open collar and loose sleeves; over this there is a scarf, or flowing mantle, that hangs from the shoulders, and on their heads they wear high caps made of velvet, either plain, or of silk embroidered with flowers of gold, according to the rank of the wearer.
Page 137 - In the midst of this chapel there is a devil made of metal, placed in a seat also made of metal. The said devil has a crown made like that of the papal kingdom, with three crowns; and it also has four horns and four teeth, with a very large mouth, nose, and most terrible eyes. The hands are made like those of a flesh-hook, and the feet like those of a cock; so that he is a fearful object to behold.
Page 94 - In this town are merchants of all Nations and many Moors and Gentiles. Here is very great trade of all sorts of spices, drugs, silk, cloth of silk, fine tapestry of Persia*, great store of pearls, which come from the Isle of Baharim and are the best pearls of all others, and many horses of Persia, which serve all India'.
Page 109 - The common people go quite naked, with the exception of a piece of cloth about their middle.
Page 36 - Rahme, or the Mountain of Mercy, rises on the north-east side of the plain, close to the mountains which encompass it, but separated from them by a rocky valley ; it is about a mile, or a mile and a half in circuit ; its sides are sloping, and its summit is nearly two hundred feet above the level of the plain. On the eastern side...
Page vi - Itinerario de Ludovico de Verthema Bolognese ne lo Egypto, ne la, Suria, ne la Arabia Deserta & Felice, ne la Persia, ne la India : & ne la Ethiopia, sm.
Page 193 - Even after centuries of neglect, the beds of many of these tanks cover areas of from ten to fifteen miles in circumference. They are now generally broken and decayed ; the waters which would fertilise a province are allowed to waste themselves in the sands, and hundreds of square miles capable of furnishing food for all the inhabitants of Ceylon are abandoned to solitude and malaria, whilst rice for the support of the non-agricultural population is annually imported from the opposite coast of India.
Page 141 - And when the king takes a wife he selects the most worthy and the most honoured of these Brahmins and makes him sleep the first night with his wife, in order that he may deflower her. Do not imagine that the Brahmin goes willingly to perform this operation. The king is even obliged to pay him four hundred or five hundred ducats.
Page 35 - The city is most beautiful, and is very well inhabited, and contains about 6,000 families. The houses are extremely good, like our own, and there are houses worth three or four thousand ducats each. This city is not surrounded by walls. A quarter of a mile distant from the city we found a mountain where there was a road cut by human labour.