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Marco Polo, Rustichello of Pisa - The Travels of Marco Polo, 1

in the Roman de Mahommet the young impostor is master of all the seven. There is one
mediaeval poem called the Marriage of the Seven Arts, and another called the Battle of the

Seven Arts
. (See also Dante, Convito, Trat. II. c. 14; Not. et Ex. V., 491 seqq.)

NOTE 3. - The Chinghizide Princes were eminently liberal - or indifferent - in religion; and even after
they became Mahomedan, which, however, the Eastern branch never did, they were rarely and only by

brief fits persecutors. Hence there was scarcely one of the non-Mahomedan Khans of whose conversion

to Christianity there were not stories spread. The first rumours of Chinghiz in the West were as of a

Christian conqueror; tales may be found of the Christianity of Chagatai, Hulaku, Abaka, Arghun, Baidu,

Ghazan, Sartak, Kuyuk, Mangu, Kublai, and one or two of the latter's successors in China, all probably

false, with one or two doubtful exceptions.

[1] See plates with ch. xvii. of Bk. IV. See also the Uighur character in
the second Paiza, Bk. II. ch. vii.

CHAPTER VIII. HOW THE GREAT KAAN GAVE THEM A TABLET OF GOLD, BEARING
HIS ORDERS IN THEIR BEHALF.

When the Prince had charged them with all his commission, he caused to be given them a Tablet of Gold,
on which was inscribed that the three Ambassadors should be supplied with everything needful in all the

countries through which they should pass - with horses, with escorts, and, in short, with whatever they

should require. And when they had made all needful preparations, the three Ambassadors took their leave

of the Emperor and set out.

When they had travelled I know not how many days, the Tartar Baron fell sick, so that he could not ride,
and being very ill, and unable to proceed further, he halted at a certain city. So the Two Brothers judged

it best that they should leave him behind and proceed to carry out their commission; and, as he was well

content that they should do so, they continued their journey. And I can assure you, that whithersoever

they went they were honourably provided with whatever they stood in need of, or chose to command.

And this was owing to that Tablet of Authority from the Lord which they carried with them.[NOTE 1]

So they travelled on and on until they arrived at Layas in Hermenia, a journey which occupied them, I
assure you, for three years.[NOTE 2] It took them so long because they could not always proceed, being

stopped sometimes by snow, or by heavy rains falling, or by great torrents which they found in an

impassable state.

NOTE 1. - On these Tablets, see a note under Bk. II. ch. vii.

NOTE 2. - AYAS, called also Ayacio, Aiazzo, Giazza, Glaza, La Jazza, and Layas, occupied the
site of ancient Aegae, and was the chief port of Cilician Armenia, on the Gulf of Scanderoon.

Aegae
had been in the 5th century a place of trade with the West, and the seat of a bishopric, as we
learn from the romantic but incomplete story of Mary, the noble slave-girl, told by Gibbon (ch. 33). As

Ayas it became in the latter part of the 13th century one of the chief places for the shipment of Asiatic

wares arriving through Tabriz, and was much frequented by the vessels of the Italian Republics. The

Venetians had a Bailo resident there.

Ayas is the Leyes of Chaucer's Knight, -

("At LEYES was he and at Satalie") -

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