National Institute of Informatics - Digital Silk Road Project
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The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.2 |
MIRACLE INDEX
AIUNGUL••TEAIUR
641
Miracle Stories, fish in Lent, i. 5257n ; Mountain moved, 68-73 ; St. Barsamo's girdles, 77 ; Holy Fire, 8o ; Stone at Samarkand, 185 ; at St. Thomas' Shrine, ii. 354, 356n 358n
Mírat, ii. 426;i
Mire, French for leech, i. 8 i n
Mirkhond, ii. 18on
Mirobolans, ii. 388n
Miskál, a weight, i. 353nn, ii. 41n, 217n, 592n. (See also Saggio.)
Misri, sugar-candy, ii. 23on
Missionary Friars, powers conferred on, i. 22, 23n ; in China in 14th century, r4o, ii. 154n, 237n, 24on
Martyrs, i. 312n, ii. 396n
Moa of New Zealand, ii. 417n, 418n Modhafferians, the, i. 86n
Modun Khotan (" Wood-ville "), i. 408n Moghistan, i. i ion
Mohammed, son of Yusuf Kelefi, founder
of Shíráz, i. 85n
Mohammerah, ii. 444n Mohiuddin, i. 24n
Vlokli, the Jelair, ii. 462n Molayu, ii. 283n
Molebar, see Malabar Molephatan, ii. 426n Molière, Pastorale Comique, Moluccas, ii. 265n Mombasa, ii. 424n
Momein, ii. 57n, Bon, 81n
Monasteries of Idolaters (Buddhists), i.
167, 219, 286n, 303, 319n, ii. 171,
174n, 175, 176n, 213n
Money, paper, i. 423-425, 426n-430n values, i. 426n, ii. -9on-592n Mongol conquests, 9, io; capture Soldaia,
4n ; Bolghar, 7n, 8n ; treachery and cruelty, 61n, 151n, 265n, ii. 18 i n ; their inroads, i. 1o5n; Bakh city, 151n ; invade Balakhshán, 161 n ; invasion of Poland and Silesia, ii. 493gí
Mongon Khan, see Mangu
Mongotay (Mangkutai), a Mongol officer,
136, 138n
Monkeys, ii. 285, 382, 431 ; passed off as pygmies, 285, 383n-385n
Monks, idolatrous, i. 303. (See Monasteries.)
Monnier, Marcel, his visit to Karakorum,
23on ; on the Ch'éng-tu Suspension Bridge, ii. 41n Monoceros and Maiden, legend of, ii.
285, 291n
Monophysitism, i. 6 i n
Monsoons, 23, ii. 264-265
Montecorvino, John, Archbishop of
Cambaluc, i. 117n, 287n, 289n, 346n,
i Bon
Monte d'Ely, ii. 386n, 387n
Montgomerie, Major T. G. (R.E.) (Indian Survey), on fire at great alti-
VOL. II.
i
i. 341n
tudes, i. 178n ; position of Kashgar and Yarkund, 182n
Monument at Si-ngan fu, Christian, ii. 27n, 28n
Moon, Mountains of the, ii. 415n, 42on, 42 In
Moore, Light of the Harem, i. I 15n l\loplas, see Mapillas
Morgan, E. Delmar, i, 176n, 198n, 207n
Mortagne, siege of, ii. 165n
lilorus alba, silk-worm tree, ii. 25n Moscow, Tartar Massacre at, ii. 493n Mosolin, or Muslin (Mosolini), Mo-sze,
Arab Mauçili, i. 6o, 62n, ii. 363n, 408n Mossos, a tribe, ii. 6on, 63n
Mosta'sim Billah, last Abbaside Khalif
of Baghdad, story of his avarice and death, i. 63-64, 67n
1l'Iostocotto, i. 87n
Mosul (Mausul), i. 46, 6o, 61n, 62;i
Motapallé, see Mutfili
Motawakkil, Khalif, i. 131n
Moule, Bishop G. E., ii. 194n-198n,
2o9n-213n, 215n
Mount, Green, in Palace grounds at
Peking, i. 365, 37on, J72n,
St Thomas, ii. 356n, 358n
D'Ely, see Monte d'Ely
Mountain, Old Man of the, see Old Man of the
Miracle of the, i. 68-73
Road in Shensi, extraordinary, ii.
32n
Mourning customs, at I-Iormuz, i. 109 ; in Tangut, 204 ; at Kinsay, ii. 191 ; Mozambique Channel, ii. 415n
Muang, term applied in Shan countries (Laos and W. Yunnan) to fortified towns, as :-
Muang-Chi, ii. 67n
Muang, or Mating Maorong, ii, 79n, I 13n
Muang Shung, ii. 120n
Muang Yong, ii. 57n, 117n, 128n Muláhidah (Mulehet, Alamút, Chinese
Mulahi), epithet of Ismaelites, i. 139,
141n, 142n, 146n
Mulberry Trees, i. 423, ii. 13, 24 Mul-Java, ii. 349n
1\'Iiiller, F. W. K., ii. 89n
Müller, Professor Max, i. 65n ; on
Couvade, ii. 93n ; on stories of Buddha and St. Josafat, 323n, 325ií, 326n, 328n
Multan, ii. 426n
Múnál pheasant (Lopophorus i;npeyanus),
described by !Elan, i. 28on
Mung (Nicaea), i. 104n
Mungasht, hill fort, stronghold of the
Atabegs, i. 85n
Mungul, name applied to Tartars, i. 285.
(See Mongol.)
Mungul-Temur and Mongo-Temur, see
Mangu-Teneur
2 S
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