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The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.1 |
CHAP. IX. TIIE BROTHERS RETURNING REACH ACRE
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story of P'lary, the noble slave-girl, told by Gibbon (ch. J3). As Ayas it became in the latter part of the 13th century one of the chief places for the shipment of Asiatic wares arriving through Tabriz, and was much frequented by the vessels of the Italian Republics. The Venetians had a Bailo resident there.
Ayas is the Le)'es of Chaucer's Knight,—
(" At LEYES was he and at Satalie ") —
and the Layas of Froissart. (Bk. III. ch. xxii.) The Gulf of Layas is described in the xix. Canto of Ariosto, where Mafisa and Astolfo find on its shores a country of barbarous Amazons :--
" Fatto è '1 porto a sembranza d' una luna," etc.
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Marino Sanuto says of it : " Laiacio has a haven, and a shoal in front of it that we might rather call a reef, and to this shoal the hawsers of vessels are moored whilst the anchors are laid out towards the land." (II. IV. eh. xxvi.)
The present Ayas is a wretched village of some 15 huts, occupied by about 600 Turkmans, and standing inside the ruined walls of the castle. This castle, which is still in good condition, was built by the Armenian kings, and restored by Sultan Suleiman ; it was constructed from the remains of the ancient city ; fragments of old columns are embedded in its walls of cut stone. It formerly communicated by a causeway with an advanced work on an island before the harbour. The ruins of the city occupy a large space. (Langlois, V. en Cilicie, pp. 429-31 ; see also Beaufort's Z aramania, near the end.) A plan of Ayas will be found at the beginning of Bk. I.
—II. Y. and H. C.
CHAPTER IX.
How THE Two BROTHERS CAME TO THE CITY OF ACRE.
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THEY departed from Layas and came to ACRE, arriving
there in the month of April, in the year of Christ 1269,
and then they learned that the Pope was dead. And when
they found that the Pope was dead (his name was Pope
* *),1 they went to a certain wise Churchman who was
Legate for the whole kingdom of Egypt, and a man of
great authority, by name THEOBALD OF PIACENZA, and
told him of the mission on which they were come. When
the Legate heard their story, he was greatly surprised, and
deemed the thing to be of great honour and advantage
for the whole of Christendom. So his answer to the two
Ambassador Brothers was this : " Gentlemen, ye see that
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