William of Rubruck
Template:Short description William of Rubruck (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; or Guillaume de Rubrouck) was a Flemish Franciscan missionary and explorer, and a subject and confidant of King Louis IX of France, better known as Saint Louis.
William was born likely in the 1210s or 1220s in Rubrouck (County of Flanders, Kingdom of France, today's France), and died, according to sources, in the 1270s or after 1293. He is best known for his travels to various parts of the Middle East and Central Asia in the 13th century, including the Mongol Empire.
He traveled to Mongolia in 1253–1254, thus preceding the journeys of Marco Polo and Odoric of Pordenone. He visited Karakorum, the capital of the Empire, and provided some descriptions of it. Upon his return, unable to meet the King of France in person, he wrote him a long letter recounting his journey through the Mongol Empire.
His account of his travels is one of the masterpieces of medieval travel literature, comparable to those of Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta, as well as an essential historical source. However, it never attained the popularity of Marco Polo’s book.
Mission
William was born in Rubrouck, County of Flanders, Kingdom of France.Template:Efn In 1248, he accompanied King Louis IX of France, better known as Saint Louis, on the Seventh Crusade. On 7 May 1253, on Louis' orders, he set out on a missionary journey to convert the Tatars to Christianity.<ref>Template:Cite CE1913</ref> He first stopped in Constantinople to confer with Baldwin of Hainaut, who had recently returned from a trip to Karakorum, the capital of the Mongol Empire, on behalf of Baldwin II, Latin Emperor.Template:Citation needed There, William received letters to some of the Tatar chiefs from the emperor.Template:Sfn
William then followed the route of the first journey of the Hungarian Friar Julian, and in Asia that of the Italian Friar Giovanni da Pian del Carpine. With William's party were Bartolomeo da Cremona, an attendant called Gosset, and an interpreter named in William's report as Homo Dei, meaning "man of God", perhaps representing the Arabic Abdullah, "servant of God".Template:Citation needed William's was the fourth European mission to the Mongols: previous ones had been led by Giovanni da Pian del Carpine and Ascelin of Lombardia in 1245 and André de Longjumeau in 1249. The King had been encouraged to send another mission by reports of the presence of Nestorian Christians at the Mongolian court, but because of an earlier rebuff he declined to send a formal mission.Template:Sfn
Travels
After reaching the Crimean town of Sudak, William continued his trek with oxen and carts. Nine days after crossing the Don, he met Sartaq Khan, next ruler of the Kipchak Khanate. The Khan sent William on to his father, Batu Khan, at Sarai near the Volga River. Five weeks later, after the departure from Sudak, he reached the encampment of Batu Khan, Mongol ruler of the Kipchak Khanate and Volga River region. William is said to have taken an aggressive approach with Batu, promising him eternal damnation and everlasting fire should he not convert.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Batu was offended by William's preaching and reportedly saw it as a threat.<ref name=":0" /> Batu refused conversion but sent the ambassadors on to the Great Khan of the Mongols, Möngke Khan.
William and his travelling companions set off on horseback on 16 September 1253 on a Template:Convert journey to the court of the Great Khan at Karakorum in modern-day Mongolia. Arriving in late December they were received courteously, and he was given an audience on 4 January 1254.Template:Sfn William's account provided an extensive description of the city's walls, markets and temples, and the separate quarters for Muslim and Chinese craftsmen among a surprisingly cosmopolitan population. He also visited the court of the Vastacius (Empire of Nicaea) during the feast day of Felicitas and met Nicaean envoys during his travels. Among the Europeans he encountered were the nephew of an English bishop, a woman from Lorraine who cooked William's Easter dinner, and Guillaume Boucher, a French silversmith who was making ornaments for the Khan's women and altars for the Nestorian Christians.<ref>Frances Wood, The Silk Road: two thousand years in the heart of Asia 2002:119.</ref><ref name="Rossabi2014">Template:Cite book</ref> William is highly critical of Nestorians in his accounts, believing them to be heretical.<ref name=":0" />
William's party stayed at the Khan's camp until 10 July 1254, when they began their long journey back home. After spending two weeks in late September with Batu Khan, and Christmas at Nakhchivan in present-day Azerbaijan, he and his companions reached the County of Tripoli on 15 August 1255.Template:Sfn
Account
On his return, William presented to King Louis IX a very clear and precise report, entitled Template:Lang. William's report is divided into 40 chapters. Chapters 1–10 relate general observations about the Mongols and their customs, while chapters 11–40 give an account of the course and the events of William's voyage.
In the report, he described the peculiarities of the Mongol Empire as well as many geographical observations. There were also anthropological observations, such as his surprise at the presence of Islam in Inner Asia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> William was critical of the Hellenic traditions he encountered among the Christians of the former Byzantine Empire, including the Nicaean celebration of a feast day for Felicitas, which he reports was known to John III Doukas Vatatzes through the alleged possession of the second half of Ovid's incomplete Book of Days.<ref>Geschichte der Mongolen und Reisebericht, 1245-1247. (Trans. and ed., Friedrich Risch.). Leipzig: E. Pfeiffer, 1930, p. 174, n.34</ref>
William also answered a long-standing question in demonstrating by his passage north of the Caspian Sea that it was an inland sea and did not flow into the Arctic Ocean; although earlier Scandinavian explorers like Ingvar the Far-Travelled had extensive knowledge of the region, William was the first to answer the question in written form.
William's report is one of the great masterpieces of medieval geographical literature, comparable to that of Marco Polo, although they are very different. William was a good observer and an excellent writer. He asked many questions along the way and did not take folk tales and fables as literal truth.Template:Citation needed He showed a great facility with language, noting the similarities between those he encountered and those European languages he already knew.Template:Sfn
In May 1254, during his stay among the Mongols, William entered into a famous competition at the Mongol court, as the khan encouraged a formal theological debate between the Christians, Buddhists, and Muslims, in order to determine which faith was correct, as determined by three judges, one from each faith.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> A Chinese person participated with William in the competition.<ref name="Kim2004">Template:Cite book</ref>
Roger Bacon, William's contemporary and fellow-Franciscan, cited the traveller copiously in his Opus Majus, and described him as "Brother William through whom the lord King of France sent a message to the Tartars in 1253 ADTemplate:Nbsp...who traveled to regions in the east and north and attached himself to the midst of these places, and wrote of the above to the illustrious king; which book I carefully read and with his permission expounded on".Template:Efn After Bacon, however, William's narrative seems to have dropped out of sight until Richard Hakluyt's 1599 publication.Template:Sfn
Russian poet Nikolay Zabolotskiy wrote in 1958 the long poem "Rubruck in Mongolia" ("Рубрук в Монголии").
Editions
The Latin text of an incomplete manuscript containing only the first 26 chapters, together with an English translation by Richard Hakluyt, was published in 1599.Template:Sfn A critical edition of the complete Latin text prepared by the French historian Francisque Michel and the English antiquarian Thomas Wright was published in 1839.Template:Sfn An English translation by William Woodville Rockhill, The Journey of William of Rubruk to the Eastern Parts, was published by the Hakluyt Society in 1900,Template:Sfn and an updated translation by Peter Jackson in 1990.Template:Sfn
List of manuscripts
| ManuscriptTemplate:Efn | Date | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Corpus Christi, Cambridge, MS 181, pp. 321–398<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | Last quarter of the 13th century | Oldest and the basis of Van den Wyngaert's 1929 critical edition. |
| B | Corpus Christi, Cambridge, MS 66A, ff. 67r–110r<ref name=cc66a>Template:Cite web</ref> | First third of 14th century | Contains a historiated initial at the beginning of the text and includes some chapter titles in the margins. |
| C | Corpus Christi, Cambridge, MS 407, ff. 37r–66r<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | Beginning of 15th century | Ends after Chapter 26 paragraph 8. |
| D | British Library, MS Royal 14 C XIII ff. 255r–236r<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 15th century | Ends after Chapter 26 paragraph 8. Used by Richard Hakluyt for his 1599 translation. |
| E | Yale University Library, New Haven, Beinecke MS 406 ff. 93r–142v<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> | 15th century |
See also
Notes
References
Sources
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book Based on British Library MS Royal 14.C.XIII Fol. 225r-236r and thus ends prematurely.
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book A critical edition of the Latin text on pp. 213–396.
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Further reading
- Cameron, Nigel - Barbarians And Mandarins: Thirteen Centuries of Western Travelers in China (New York, 1970). ISBN 0-8027-2403-5.
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External links
Template:Wikisource/outer core{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|showblankpositional=1|unknown=|1|2|3|diagnose|has|italic|italics|lang|nocat|position|title|wislink|works|wslink}}
- Rubrouck Museum.
- Map of Rubruck's Route, Silk Road Seattle, University of Washington.
- William of Rubruck's Account of the Mongols, Silk Road Seattle, University of Washington. From the 1900 Rockhill translation.
- Pages with broken file links
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
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- 1220s births
- 1290s deaths
- People from Nord (French department)
- 13th-century explorers
- 13th-century writers in Latin
- Roman Catholic missionaries in Mongolia
- Diplomats for the Holy See
- Explorers of Asia
- Flemish Franciscans
- Christians of the Sixth Crusade
- Christians of the Seventh Crusade
- Franciscan missionaries
- Belgian Roman Catholic missionaries