The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,230 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1.

The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,230 pages of information about The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1.

There does not seem any doubt as to the identity of Bardashir with the present city of Kerman. (See The Cities of Kirman in the time of Hamd-Allah Mustawfi and Marco Polo, by Guy le Strange, Jour.  R. As.  Soc. April, 1901, pp. 281, 290.) Hamd-Allah is the author of the Cosmography known as the Nuzhat-al-Kulub or “Heart’s Delight.” (Cf.  Major Sykes’ Persia, chap. xvi., and the Geographical Journal for February, 1902, p. 166.)—­H.  C.]

NOTE 2.—­A MS. treatise on precious stones cited by Ouseley mentions Shebavek in Kerman as the site of a Turquoise mine.  This is probably Shahr-i-Babek, about 100 miles west of the city of Kerman, and not far from Parez, where Abbott tells us there is a mine of these stones, now abandoned.  Goebel, one of Khanikoff’s party, found a deposit of turquoises at Taft, near Yezd. (Ouseley’s Travels, I. 211; J.  R. G. S. XXVI. 63-65; Khan.  Mem. 203.)

["The province Kerman is still rich in turquoises.  The mines of Pariz or Parez are at Chemen-i-mo-aspan, 16 miles from Pariz on the road to Bahramabad (principal place of Rafsinjan), and opposite the village or garden called God-i-Ahmer.  These mines were worked up to a few years ago; the turquoises were of a pale blue.  Other turquoises are found in the present Bardshir plain, and not far from Mashiz, on the slopes of the Chehel tan mountain, opposite a hill called the Bear Hill (tal-i-Khers).  The Shehr-i-Babek turquoise mines are at the small village Karik, a mile from Medvar-i-Bala, 10 miles north of Shehr-i-Babek.  They have two shafts, one of which has lately been closed by an earthquake, and were worked up to about twenty years ago.  At another place, 12 miles from Shehr-i-Babek, are seven old shafts now not worked for a long period.  The stones of these mines are also of a very pale blue, and have no great value.” (Houtum-Schindler, l.c. 1881, p. 491.)

The finest turquoises came from Khorasan; the mines were near Maaden, about 48 miles to the north of Nishapuer. (Heyd, Com. du Levant, II. p. 653; Ritter, Erdk. pp. 325-330.)

It is noticeable that Polo does not mention indigo at Kerman.—­H.  C.]

NOTE 3.—­Edrisi says that excellent iron was produced in the “cold mountains” N.W. of Jiruft, i.e. somewhere south of the capital; and Jihan Numa, or Great Turkish Geography, that the steel mines of Niriz, on the borders of Kerman, were famous.  These are also spoken of by Teixeira.  Major St. John enables me to indicate their position, in the hills east of Niriz. (Edrisi, vol. i. p. 430; Hammer, Mem. lur la Perse, p. 275; Teixeira, Relaciones, p. 378; and see Map of Itineraries, No.  II.)

["Marco Polo’s steel mines are probably the Parpa iron mines on the road from Kerman to Shiraz, called even to-day M’aden-i-fulad (steel mine); they are not worked now.  Old Kerman weapons, daggers, swords, old stirrups, etc., made of steel, are really beautiful, and justify Marco Polo’s praise of them” (Houtum-Schindler, l.c. p. 491)—­H.  C.]

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