The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook icon

The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook

★★★★★
★★★★★
(0.00/5)

1.0Free2 years ago

Download The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook APK latest version Free for Android

Version 1.0
Update
Size 4.59 MB (4,816,958 bytes)
Developer KiVii
Category Apps, Books & Reference
Package Name kiviicreative.travels.mandeville
OS 4.1 and up

The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook APPLICATION description

The Travels of Sir John Mandeville by Sir John Mandeville Free eBook
Sir John Mandeville is the supposed author of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, a travel memoir which first circulated between 1357 and 1371. The earliest surviving text is in French.

By aid of translations into many other languages, the work acquired extraordinary popularity. Despite the extremely unreliable and often fantastical nature of the travels it describes, it was used as a work of reference - Christopher Columbus, for example, was heavily influenced by both this work and Marco Polo's earlier Travels



At least part of the personal history of Mandeville is mere invention. No contemporary corroboration of the existence of such a Jehan de Mandeville is known. Some French manuscripts, not contemporary, give a Latin letter of presentation from him to Edward III, but so vague that it might have been penned by any writer on any subject. It is in fact beyond reasonable doubt that the travels were in large part compiled by a Liége physician, known as Johains à le Barbe or Jehan à la Barbe, otherwise Jehan de Bourgogne.

The evidence of this is in a modernized extract quoted by the Liège herald, Louis Abry (1643 - 1720), from the lost fourth book of the Myreur des Hystors of Johans des Preis, styled d'Oultremouse. In this "Jean de Bourgogne, dit a la Barbe", is said to have revealed himself on his deathbed to d'Oultremouse, whom he made his executor, and to have described himself in his will as "messire Jean de Mandeville, chevalier, comte de Montfort en Angleterre et seigneur de l'isle de Campdi et du château Pérouse (Lord Jean de Mandeville, knight, Count de Montfort in England and lord of the Isle of Campdi and the castle Pérouse)".

It is added that, having had the misfortune to kill an unnamed count in his own country, he engaged himself to travel through the three parts of the world, arrived at Liège in 1343, was a great naturalist, profound philosopher and astrologer, and had a remarkable knowledge of physics. The identification is confirmed by the fact that in the now destroyed church of the Guillemins was a tombstone of Mandeville, with a Latin inscription stating that he was otherwise named "ad Barbam", was a professor of medicine, and died at Liège on November 17, 1372: this inscription is quoted as far back as 1462.

Even before his death, the Liège physician seems to have confessed to a share in the circulation of, and additions to, the work. In the common Latin abridged version of it, at the end of c. vii., the author says that when stopping in the sultan's court at Cairo he met a venerable and expert physician of "our" parts, but that they rarely came into conversation because their duties were of a different kind, but that long afterwards at Liège he composed this treatise at the exhortation and with the help (Jiortatu et adiutorio) of the same venerable man, as he will narrate at the end of it Free eBook
↓ Read more
The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 1 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 2 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 3 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 4 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 5 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 6 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 7 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 8 The Travels of Sir John Mandeville Free eBook screen 9