FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   726   727   728   729   730   731   732   733   734   735   736   737   738   739   740   741   742   743   744   745   746   747   748   749   750  
751   752   753   754   755   756   757   758   759   760   761   762   763   764   765   766   767   768   769   770   771   772   773   774   775   >>   >|  
) gives a list of the garments issued to certain officials on these ceremonial occasions under the Mongols, and sure enough this list includes "pairs of boots in red leather." Odoric particularly mentions the broad golden girdles worn at the Kaan's court. [La Curne, _Dict._, has _Bulga_, leather bag; old Gallic word from which are derived _bouge_ et _bougete, bourse_; he adds in a note, "Festus writes: '_Bulgas_ galli sacculos scorteos vocant.'"--H. C.] NOTE 3.--"Then come mummers leading lions, which they cause to salute the Lord with reverence." (_Odoric_, p. 143.) A lion sent by Mirza Baisangar, one of the Princes of Timur's House, accompanied Shah Rukh's embassy as a present to the Emperor; and like presents were frequently repeated. (See _Amyot_, XIV. 37, 38.) CHAPTER XVII. HOW THE GREAT KAAN ENJOINETH HIS PEOPLE TO SUPPLY HIM WITH GAME. The three months of December, January, and February, during which the Emperor resides at his Capital City, are assigned for hunting and fowling, to the extent of some 40 days' journey round the city; and it is ordained that the larger game taken be sent to the Court. To be more particular: of all the larger beasts of the chase, such as boars, roebucks, bucks, stags, lions, bears, etc., the greater part of what is taken has to be sent, and feathered game likewise. The animals are gutted and despatched to the Court on carts. This is done by all the people within 20 or 30 days' journey, and the quantity so despatched is immense. Those at a greater distance cannot send the game, but they have to send the skins after tanning them, and these are employed in the making of equipments for the Emperor's army.[NOTE 1] NOTE 1.--So Magaillans: "Game is so abundant, especially at the capital, that every year during the three winter months you see at different places, intended for despatch thither, besides great piles of every sort of wildfowl, rows of four-footed game of a gunshot or two in length: the animals being all frozen and standing on their feet. Among other species you see three sundry kinds of bears ... and great abundance of other animals, as stags and deer of different sorts, boars, elks, hares, rabbits, squirrels, wild-cats, rats, geese, ducks, very fine jungle-fowl, etc., and all so cheap that I never could have believed it" (pp. 177-178). As this writer mentions _wild-cats_, we may presume that the "lions" of Polo also were destined to be eaten. ["Kubilai K
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   726   727   728   729   730   731   732   733   734   735   736   737   738   739   740   741   742   743   744   745   746   747   748   749   750  
751   752   753   754   755   756   757   758   759   760   761   762   763   764   765   766   767   768   769   770   771   772   773   774   775   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

animals

 

Emperor

 

months

 

despatched

 
larger
 

mentions

 

greater

 
journey
 

Odoric

 
leather

making

 
employed
 

tanning

 

equipments

 
abundant
 

Magaillans

 

roebucks

 

distance

 

people

 

likewise


gutted

 

feathered

 

immense

 
quantity
 

intended

 

jungle

 
squirrels
 

rabbits

 

believed

 

destined


Kubilai

 

presume

 

writer

 

wildfowl

 
footed
 

thither

 
winter
 

places

 

beasts

 
despatch

gunshot

 

sundry

 
species
 

abundance

 
length
 

frozen

 
standing
 
capital
 

officials

 
mummers