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0616 The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.1
The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.1 / Page 616 (Color Image)

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doi: 10.20676/00000269
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312

MARCO POLO   1300K I.

   

The accusations of cannibalism indeed against the Tibetans in old accounts are frequent, and I have elsewhere (see Cathay, p. 151) remarked on some singular

Tibetan practices which go far to account for such charges. Della Penna, too, makes

a statement which bears curiously on the present passage. Remarking on the great use made by certain classes of the Lamas of human skulls for magical cups, and of

human thigh bones for flutes and whistles, he says that to supply them with these the bodies of executed criminals were stored up at the disposal of the Lamas ; and a Hindu account of Tibet in the Asiatic Researches asserts that when one is killed in a fight both parties rush forward and struggle for the liver, which they eat (vol. xv).

[Carpini says of the people of Tibet : " They are pagans ; they have a most astonishing, or rather horrible, custom, for, when any one's father is about to give up

the ghost, all the relatives meet together, and they eat him, as was told to me for

certain." Mr. Rockhill (Rzzbruck, p. 152, note) writes : " So far as I am aware, this charge [of cannibalism] is not made by any Oriental writer against the Tibetans, though

both Arab travellers to China in the ninth century and Armenian historians of the thirteenth century say the Chinese practised cannibalism. The Armenians designate China by the name Nankas, which I take to be Chinese Nan-kuo, ` southern country,' the i11'uzzi country of Marco Polo."--H. C.]

But like charges of cannibalism are brought against both Chinese and Tartars very positively. Thus, without going back to the Anthropophagous Scythians of Ptolemy nd Mela, we read in the Relations of the Arab travellers of the ninth century : " In China it occurs sometimes that the governor of a province revolts from his duty to the

emperor. In such a case he is slaughtered and eaten. In fact, the Chinese eat the flesh of all men who are executed by the sword." Dr. Rennie mentions a superstitious practice, the continued existence of which in our own day he has himself witnessed,

and which might perhaps have given rise to some such statement as that of the Arab travellers, if it be not indeed a relic, in a mitigated form, of the very practice they

assert to have prevailed. After an execution at Peking certain large pith balls are

steeped in the blood, and under the name of blood-bread are sold as a medicine for consumption. It is only to the blood of decapitated criminals that any such healzns

power is attributed. It has been asserted in the annals of the Propagation de la Foi

that the Chinese executioners of M. Chapdelaine, a missionary who was martyred in Kwang-si in 1856 (28th February), were seen to eat the heart of their victim ; and

M. Huot, a missionary in the Yun-nan province, recounts a case of cannibalism which he witnessed. Bishop Chauveau, at Ta Ts'ien-lu, told Mr. Cooper that he had seen men in one of the cities of Yun-nan eating the heart and brains of a celebrated robber who had been executed. Dr. Carstairs Douglas of Amoy also tells me that the like practices have occurred at Amoy and Swatau.

[With reference to cannibalism in China see Medical Superstitions an Incentive to Anti-Foreign Riots in China, by D. J. I1latgo'wais, North China Herald, 8th July,

1892, pp. 6o-62. Mr. E. H. Parker (China Review, February-March, 1901, 136) relates that the inhabitants of a part of Kwang-si boiled and ate a Chinese officer who had been sent to pacify them. " The idea underlying this horrible act [cannibalism] is, that by eating a portion of the victim, especially the heart, one acquires the valour with which he was endowed." (Dennys' Folk-lore of China, 67.)—H. C.]

Hayton, the Armenian, after relating the treason of a Saracen, called Parwana (he was an Tconian Turk), against Abaka Khan, says : " He was taken and cut in

two, and orders were issued that in all the food eaten by Abaka there should be put

a portion of the traitor's flesh. Of this Abaka himself ate, and caused all his barons to partake. And this was in accordance with the custom of the Tartars." The same

story is related independently and differently by Friar Ricold, thus : " When the

army of Abaga ran away from the Saracens in Syria, a certain great .Tartar baron was arrested who had been guilty of treason. And when the Emperor Khan was giving

the order for his execution the Tartar ladies and women interposed, and begged that he might be made over to them. Having got hold of the prisoner they boiled him alive, and cutting his body up into mince-meat gave it to eat to the whole army, as

   
   
   
   

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