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Look Inside Bondage and Travels of Johann Schiltberger

Bondage and Travels of Johann Schiltberger
A Native of Bavaria, in Europe, Asia, and Africa, 1396–1427

Part of Cambridge Library Collection - Hakluyt First Series

  • Date Published: June 2010
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108011495

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About the Authors
  • The publications of the Hakluyt Society (founded in 1846) made available edited (and sometimes translated) early accounts of exploration. The first series, which ran from 1847 to 1899, consists of 100 books containing published or previously unpublished works by authors from Christopher Columbus to Sir Francis Drake, and covering voyages to the New World, to China and Japan, to Russia and to Africa and India. This volume contains an English translation of the extraordinary story of Johann Schiltberger (1381–?1440), who was captured in battle as a teenager and enslaved by Bayezid I. On the latter's defeat by Timur (Tamburlane) in 1402, Schiltberger fell into the hands of the legendary Scourge of God, and in his service and that of his sons, he travelled to Armenia, Georgia and other Caucasian territories, down the river Volga, to Siberia and to the Crimea, eventually escaping and returning to his home in 1427.

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    Product details

    • Date Published: June 2010
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108011495
    • length: 320 pages
    • dimensions: 216 x 140 x 18 mm
    • weight: 0.41kg
    • contains: 1 map
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Preface
    Bibliography
    Introduction
    1. Of the first combat between King Sigmund and the Turks
    2. How the Turkish king treated the prisoners
    3. How Wyasit subjugated an entire country
    4. How Wyasit made war on his brother-on-law, and killed him
    5. How Weyasit drives away the king of Sebast
    6. What sixty of us Christians had agreed upon
    7. How Wyasit took the city of Samson
    8. Of serpents and vipers
    9. How the infidels remain in the fields with their cattle, in winter and summer
    10. How Weyasit took a country that belonged to the Sultan
    11. Of the King-Sultan
    12. How Temerlin conquered the kingdom of Sebast
    13. Weyasit conquers Lesser Armenia
    14. How Tämerlin goes to war with the King-Sultan
    15. How Tämerlin conquered Babiloni
    16. How Tämerlin conquered Lesser India
    17. How a vassal carried off riches that belonged to Tämerlin
    18. How Tämerlin caused MMM children to be killed
    19. Tämerlin wants to go to war with the Great Chan
    20. Of Tämerlin's death
    21. Of the sons of Tämerlin
    22. How Joseph caused Mirenschach to be beheaded
    23. How Joseph vanquished a king and beheaded him
    24. How Schiltberger came to Aububachir
    25. Of a king's son
    26. How one lord succeeds another lord
    27. Of an infidel woman, who had four thousand maidens
    28. In what countries I have been
    29. In which countries I have been that lay between the Tonow and the sea
    30. Of the castle of the sparrow-hawk, and how it is guarded
    31. How a poor fellow watched the sparrow-hawk
    32. More about the castle of the sparrow-hawk
    33. In which countries silk is grown
    34. Of the tower of Babilony that is of such great height
    35. Of great Tartaria
    36. The countries in which I have been, that belong to Tartary
    37. How many kings-sultan there were, whilst I was amongst the infidels
    38. Of the mountain of St. Catherine
    39. Of the withered tree
    40. Of Jherusalem and of the Holy Sepulchre
    41. Of the spring in Paradise, with IIII rivers
    42. How pepper grows in India
    43. Of Allexandria
    44. Of a great giant
    45. Of the many religions the infidels have
    46. How Machmet and his religion spread
    47. Of the infidels' Easter-day
    48. Of the other Easter-day
    49. Of the law of the infidels
    50. Why Machmet has forbidden wine to infidels
    51. Of a fellowship the infidels have among themselves
    52. How a Christian becomes an infidel
    53. What the infidels believe of Christ
    54. What the infidels say of Christians
    55. How Christians are said not to hold to their religion
    56. How long ago it is, since Machmet lived
    57. Of Constantinoppel
    58. Of the Greeks
    59. Of the Greek religion
    60. How the city of Constantinoppel was built
    61. How the Jassen have their marriage
    62. Of Armenia
    63. Of the religion of the Armenians
    64. Of a Saint Gregory
    65. Of a dragon and a unicorn
    66. Why the Greeks and Armani are enemies
    67. Through which countries I have come away
    The Armenian Pater Noster
    The Tartar Pater Noster
    Notes
    Titles of works not fully cited in the foregoing notes
    Index.

  • Author

    Johannes Schiltberger

    Translator

    J. Buchan Telfer

    Editor

    Philip Brunn

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