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JOURNAL OF ZHEJIANG UNIVERSITY  2022, Vol. 52 Issue (5): 29-38    DOI: 10.3785/j.issn.1008-942X.CN33-6000/C.2021.11.195
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The Yuan Court Festivals Recorded by European Travelers
Ma Xiaolin
School of History & Research Center for the Song-Yuan History, Nankai University, Tianjin 300350, China

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Abstract  Among European travelers on the Silk Road during the 13th and 14th centuries, Marco Polo (1254-1324) and Odorico da Pordenone (ca. 1280-1331) provided particularly detailed descriptions of China. The historical value of these materials has been noted both Chinese and overseas scholars. Drawing on the new philological achievements of European academia on the studies of original texts in Latin, Italian, and French helps transcend the limits of using second-hand translations by previous scholars. Meanwhile, textual criticism of the Chinese historical documents by making reference to their recent translations in English and Japanese promotes research on the history of Yuan China and Sino-foreign relations. The considerable accounts of the Yuan imperial festivals by Marco Polo’s Devisement dou Monde and Odorico’s Relatio, constitute the core texts for contemporary travelers to construct the image of China.The two festivals recorded by Marco Polo and the four festivals recorded by Odorico da Pordenone can all be explained in the context of the historical realities in the two specific phases of the Yuan Dynasty. Marco Polo mentioned two festivals, one for the New Year and the other for the birthday of the Great Khan. Among the ten rituals recorded in the Yuanshi (History of the Yuan Dynasty), the first two are consistent with the accounts of Marco Polo. At the beginning of 1284, Qubilai held another ceremony in Dadu, but Marco Polo did not mention it, which confirms the fact that he had left Dadu for Yangzhou at that time. The other seven rituals were never held during Marco Polo’s stay in China. Among the four festivals recorded by Odorico da Pordenone, the first two are the same as those of Marco Polo, and for the other two unnamed by Odorico, in the historical context of the reign of Emperor Taiding (1324-1328), the options could be the crown prince’s birthday, the parade in the imperial city, or the welcoming ceremony on the occasion of the imperial parade returning to Dadu. In the Yuan Dynasty, the imperial parades between the two capitals and imperial huntings in the spring and autumn were institutionally implemented. The welcoming ceremonies when the imperial parade returned to Dadu each year actually became a festival. The details of the imperial guards, itinerary, and etiquette described by Marco Polo and Odorico da Pordenone are all confirmed by Chinese historical documents. Odorico da Pordenone’s recounting of the anecdote that he and the Franciscans met the Great Khan took place right in the welcoming ceremony when the emperor arrived in Dadu from Shangdu.After textual criticism, Odorico’s three-color costumes (de viride, de sanguineo, de croceo) in the court festival are in line with the green, scarlet and purple official costumes of the Yuan Dynasty. Marco Polo and Odorico also provided rich and credible details on the court banquet, the procedure for courtiers to present gifts, and the ceremonial deacons, etc.Corroboration of various Chinese and Western literatures can prove the authenticity and importance of the historical materials left by Marco Polo and Odorico. Many previously unresolved issues can be explained by the solid evidence of linguistic research and historical backgrounds. A specific ceremony can associate a traveler with specific time and place, which provides clues for Marco Polo and Odorico’s trackway in China. The travelogues of Marco Polo and Odorico da Pordenone actively promoted the images of Yuan China in the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance.
Key wordsSino-Western cultural exchanges      the Yuan Dynasty      travelogue      medieval     
Received: 19 November 2021     
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Ma Xiaolin. The Yuan Court Festivals Recorded by European Travelers[J]. JOURNAL OF ZHEJIANG UNIVERSITY, 2022, 52(5): 29-38.
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https://www.zjujournals.com/soc/EN/10.3785/j.issn.1008-942X.CN33-6000/C.2021.11.195     OR     https://www.zjujournals.com/soc/EN/Y2022/V52/I5/29
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