- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > History
- > general surveys & lexicons
Description
Marco Polo's journey was both real and imagined-a traveler's truth woven from fact, memory, and the dreams of an age hungry for wonder. Marco Polo's Travels has shaped Western imagination of the East for over seven centuries-a world of golden cities, wise emperors, and impossible customs. Yet historians have long debated how much of his account was eyewitness truth and how much came from hearsay or creative adaptation. This book disentangles fact from legend, tracing what Marco Polo truly saw on his journey from Venice to the court of Kublai Khan.Combining textual analysis with archaeological and linguistic evidence, it follows the Polos' route through Persia, Central Asia, and China, comparing Polo's descriptions with caravan records, Mongol administrative documents, and material culture uncovered across the Silk Road. What emerges is a vivid record of real observation layered with narrative craft-a map of the medieval imagination as much as of Asia itself.From the bureaucracy of the Yuan Empire to the markets of Kashgar, Polo's story reveals how medieval travelers became both witnesses and translators of worlds in motion. This is not an exposé of fraud, but a reconstruction of truth: how memory, mediation, and wonder shaped Europe's first great window into the East. Author of English-language books exploring self-improvement, entrepreneurial success, and pivotal historical events. Jordan's work distills actionable insights from history to fuel modern personal and professional growth.



