National Institute of Informatics - Digital Silk Road Project
Digital Archive of Toyo Bunko Rare Books

> > > >
Color New!IIIF Color HighRes Gray HighRes PDF   Japanese English
0158 Notes on Marco Polo : vol.2
Notes on Marco Polo : vol.2 / Page 158 (Grayscale High Resolution Image)

New!Citation Information

doi: 10.20676/00000246
Citation Format: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

OCR Text

 

754   262. JATOLIC

II, 122, 162). I am not in a position to decide whether Paschal de Vittoria's « littera vingurica » Icy, 503) is for « uigurica » or for « iugurica ».

Plan Carpine's spelling, « Huiur », is based on Uiyur (cf. also his « Sarihuiur » = Sariy-Uiyur; icy, 88, 89).

The Chinese transcriptions of the T'ang period, 101 z Hui-ho (*yuâi-yuat) and [c?j   Hui-hu
(*yuâi-yuat) suppose the notation of the initial alif by y-; but it is by no means certain that the same explanation holds good for the h- in Plan Carpine.

262. JATOLIC

atolit FA çatholic Z iacholie TA3, V iacobia VL

iacolich P iacolit R iatolic F iatolit VB

jacholic TAI, VA jacolic FB jatolic L jatolio LT

BENEDETTO (B1, 453) writes « giatolic », which is in itself quite possible, but no Ms. gives it in fact. I have decided for « jatolic », with a French j (= z). From Arabo-Persian ß,J;1, faOaliq

or   JaOaltq, itself derived from xaOoAax6ç. The Nestorian and Armenian patriarchs are

called catholicos, but Polo uses this title afterwards only when speaking of the Nestorians (cf. chapter on Socotra). It is written « jaselich » by Burchard (LAURENT, Peregrin... quatuor, 91) and « iafelic », corrected by the editor to «iaselic», by Ricold (LAURENT, ibid., 130; Y1, 1, 61). To take the chapter on Mosul literally, Polo would seem to speak of one patriarch ruling over Nestorians, Jacobites and Armenians. But I think it is simply a case of bad redaction, and that the catholicos who sends archbishops to India and (probably) to China is only the catholicos of the Nestorians. According to the chapter on Socotra, the catholicos resided at Bagdad, and YULE remarks ( Y, t, 61) that that was true for the Nestorian patriarch in Polo's time, though, of course, it would not be true for the Jacobite or Armenian patriarchs. One point remains unsatisfactory : if the catholicos lived in Bagdad, why does Polo name Bagdad among the places to which he « sends » archbishops etc. ? As a matter of fact, at the time of Polo's return from China, the catholicos was residing mostly in Maraya, far from Bagdad (cf. CHABOT, Hist. de Mar Jabalaha III, passim).

In Armenian, the catholicos is called kathulikos, in modern pronunciation gathuyigos; the word appears in Yaqût as ,rra;.f katayikos (or gatdyicos?), which occurs also, with a corrupt spelling, in MufaNal (BLocHET, Moufazzal, 390). A form kâyikos is even met earlier, in 1189-90 (Hist. des Crois., Arabes, iv, 435-436). This is due to the fact that the Armenian 1 had already passed to y in certain regions at the end of the 11th cent. But such a conclusion is hardly reconcilable with some Armenian transcriptions of Central Asiatic names in the 13th cent.; probably the change of pronunciation had not yet taken place in the whole country at that date, and sometimes 1 still sounded 1, particularly in Cilicia.