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QUESTION-TYPE BASED TESTS
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TEST 2 – Travel Books
There are many reasons why individuals have travelled beyond their own societies. aSome travellers
may have simply desired to satisfy curiosity about the larger world. Until recent times, however, travellers
did start their journey for reasons other than mere curiosity. While the travellers’ accounts give much
valuable information on these foreign lands and provide a window for the understanding of the local cultures
and histories, they are also a mirror to the travellers themselves, for these accounts help them to have a
better understanding of themselves. Records of foreign travel appeared soon
after the invention of writing,
and fragmentary travel accounts appeared in both Mesopotamia and Egypt in ancient times. After the
formation of large, imperial states in the classical world, travel accounts emerged as a prominent literary
genre in many lands, and they held especially strong appeal for rulers desiring useful knowledge about their
realms. The Greek historian Herodotus reported on his travels in Egypt and Anatolia in researching the
history of the Persian wars. The Chinese envoy Zhang Qian described much of central Asia as far west as
Bactria (modern- day Afghanistan) on the basis of travels undertaken in the first century BCE while
searching for allies for the Han dynasty. Hellenistic and Roman geographers such as Ptolemy, Strabo, and
Pliny the Elder relied on their own travels through much of the Mediterranean world as well as reports of
other travellers to compile vast compendia of geographical knowledge.
During the post-classical era (about 500 to 1500 CE), trade and pilgrimage? emerged as major
incentives for travel to foreign lands. Muslim merchants sought trading opportuni ies throughout much of
the eastern hemisphere. They described lands, peoples, and commercial products of the
Indian Ocean basin
from East Africa to Indonesia, and they supplied the first written accounts of societies in sub-Saharan West
Africa. While merchants set out in search of trade and profit, devout Muslims travelled as pilgrims to Mecca
to make their hajj and visit the holy sites of Islam. Since the prophet Muhammad’s original pilgrimage to
Mecca, untold millions of Muslims have followed his example, and thousands of hajj accounts have related
their experiences. East Asian travelers were not quite so prominent as Muslims during the post-classical era,
but they too followed many of the highways and sea lanes of the eastern hemisphere. Chinese merchants
frequently visited South-East Asia and India, occasionally venturing even to East Africa, and devout East
Asian Buddhists undertook distant pilgrimages. Between the 5th and 9th
centuries CE, hundreds and
possibly even thousands of Chinese Buddhists travelled to India to study with Buddhist teachers, collect
sacred texts, and visit holy sites. Written accounts recorded the experiences of many pilgrims, such as
Faxian, Xuanzang, and Yijing. Though not so numerous as the Chinese pilgrims, Buddhists from Japan,
Korea, and other lands also ventured abroad in the interests of spiritual enlightenment.
Medieval Europeans did not hit the roads in such large numbers as their Muslim and East Asian
counterparts during the early part of the post-classical era, although gradually increasing crowds of Christian
pilgrims flowed to Jerusalem, Rome, Santiago de Compostela (in northern Spain), and other sites. After the
12th century, however, merchants, pilgrims, and missionaries from medieval Europe
travelled widely and
left numerous travel accounts, of which Marco Polo’s description of his travels and sojourn in China is the
best known. As they became familiar with the larger world of the eastern hemisphere - and the profitable
commercial opportunities that it offered - European peoples worked to find new and more direct routes to
Asian and African markets. Their efforts took them not only to all parts of the eastern hemisphere, but
eventually to the Americas and Oceania as well. If Muslim and Chinese peoples dominated travel and travel
writing in postclassical times, European explorers, conquerors, merchants, and missionaries took centre
stage during the early modern era (about 1500 to 1800 CE). By no means did Muslim and Chinese travel
come to a halt in early modern times. But European peoples ventured to the distant corners of the globe, and
European printing presses churned out thousands of travel accounts that described foreign
lands and peoples
for a reading public with an apparently insatiable appetite for news about the larger world. The volume of
travel literature was so great that several editors, including Giambattista Ramusio, Richard Hakluyt,
Theodore de Biy, and Samuel Purchas, assembled numerous travel accounts and made them available in
enormous published collections. During the 19th century, European travellers made their way to the interior