The Travels of Sir John Mandeville: Prologue
Since it is so
that the land beyond the sea, that is to say the Land of Promise which men call
the Holy Land, among all other lands is the most worthy land and mistress over
all others, and is blessed and hallowed and consecrated by the precious blood
of Our Lord Jesus Christ; in which land it pleased Him to take life and blood
by Our Lady Saint Mary and to travel round that land with His blessed feet. And
there He did many miracles, and preached and taught the faith and law of us
Christian men as if to His children; and there He suffered many insults and scourgings on our behalf. And He who was King of Heaven and
of Earth, of the air and the sea, and of all that is contained therein, desired
to be called King of that land especially, as the prophet says: Noli timere, filia Syon: ecce, rex tuus uenit
tibi mansuetus, that is
to say. 'Thou daughter of Sion, fear not, for lo, thy
king cometh unto thee, duly meek and
mild'; and that land He chose before all other
lands as
the best and the most honourable in the world, for,
as the philosopher says, Virtus rerum in medio consistit, that is to say, 'The excellence of things is in the middle.' And in that land He
wished to lead His life and suffer His hard Passion and death at
[the hands of] the Jews for us sinful worms, to buy and deliver us from death
without end, which was ordained for us because of the sin of our first father
Adam and because of our own also. For, as for Himself, He never deserved any
evil; for He never did evil nor thought ever evil. And He who was King of
glory, mightiest and best, wished to suffer death in that place rather than in any
other. For he who wants to do anything
that he
wishes to be openly known to all men, will have it openly cried in the centre
of a town or city, so that it may be known to all parts of the city. In the
same way He that was King of all the world wanted to suffer death at Jerusalem
which is in the middle of the world so that it might be known to men of all
parts of the world how dearly He bought man, whom He had made
in His own likeness, because of the great love He had towards him. For a more
valuable property He could not have staked for us than His own blessed body and
His precious blood, the which He suffered to be shed
for us. Ah, dear God! What love He had for His subjects when He who never
committed sin would for sinners suffer death! Right well ought men to love and
serve such a lord, and honour and praise such a Holy
Land, which brought forth such fruit, through which man is saved, except it be
through his own fault. This is the land that is promised to us as heritage; and
in that land He willed to die, and to be seised of
it, to leave it to His children. Each good Christian man who is able, and has
the means, should set himself to conquer our inheritance, this land, and chase
out therefrom those who are misbelievers. For we are
called Christian men from Christ our Father; and if we be true children of
Christ, we ought to lay claim to the heritage that our Father left to us, and
win it out of strange men's hands. But now pride, envy and covetousness have so
inflamed the hearts of lords of the world that they are more
busy to disinherit their neighbours than to
lay claim to or conquer their own rightful inheritance. And the common people,
who would put their bodies and their goods in jeopardy to conquer our heritage, may
do nothing without lords. For an assembly of the people without lords who can
govern them is as a flock of sheep that have no shepherd, which part asunder
and never known whither they should go. But if God
would that their worldly lords were in good accord,
and with others of their common people would undertake this holy voyage over
the sea, I believe that within a little time our true heritage beforesaid should be recovered and put in the hands of the
true heirs of Jesu Christ.
And for as much
as it is a long time past since there was any general passage over the sea into
the Holy Land, and since men covet to hear that land spoken of, and divers
countries thereabout, and have of that great pleasure and enjoyment, I, John
Mandeville, knight, although I am unworthy, who was born in England in the town
of St. Albans and passed the sea the year of Our Lord Jesu
Christ 1332, on Michaelmas Day, and since have been a
long time overseas, and have seen and gone through many kingdoms, lands,
provinces and isles, and have passed through Turkye
(Turkey], Armony [Armenia] the Lesser and the
Greater, Tartary, Perse [Persia], Sirie
[Syria], Araby [Arabia], Egipte
[Egypt] the Upper and the Lower, Liby [Libya], Caldee [Chaldea], and a great part of Ethiope
[Ethiopia], Amazon[ia], a great part of Inde [India] the Lesser and the Greater, and through many
other isles that are about India, where dwell many divers kinds of folk of
divers laws and shapes -- of these lands and isles I shall speak more plainly,
and shall describe a part of those things that are there, when
the time comes, according as they come to my mind, and specially
for those who desire and intend to visit the holy city of Jerusalem and the
holy places that are thereabout; and shall tell of
the way that they shall go thither, for I have many
times travelled and ridden over it in goodly company of lords.