1 / 17

The Travels of Marco Polo

The Travels of Marco Polo. 1. Marco – The Storyteller. He often told of adventures to faraway places such as China. Marco had traveled to China and the Indies ; the islands off the China coast.

walker
Download Presentation

The Travels of Marco Polo

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Travels of Marco Polo 1

  2. Marco – The Storyteller • He often told of adventures to faraway places such as China. • Marco had traveled to China and the Indies; the islands off the China coast. • He told stories about meeting Kublai Khan, China’s ruler, and seeing amazing things – white bears, black stones that burned, and a place where night lasted all winter and day lasted all summer.

  3. “Marco Millions” • People in his hometown of Venice, Italy laughed and called him Marco Millions because he told so many tales. • Few Europeans had ever been to Asia, so they could not prove Marco was wrong. • They thought his stories could not be true but many were.

  4. Marco’s Travels • Marco left his home in Venice, Italy in 1271 with his father Niccolo and his uncle Maffeo. • They were caravan traders who traveled the Silk Road and were interested in the riches of the east. • Four years after beginning their journey, the Polos reached China.

  5. Trade Routes to the East • Europeans carried on a busy trade with the people of Asia. • Europeans wanted: gold, jewels, silk, perfumes, furs, jade, ivory, and especially spices. (pepper, cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg) • They used the spices to make their food taste better and to hide the bad taste of spoiled meat.

  6. Silk Road • About 4,000 miles long, the Silk Road was a series of trade routes connecting the east to the west. (Asia to Europe) • The trade route was traveled by caravan traders and bandits who made travel much more dangerous. • The Silk Road was physically difficult for travel. • Caravans needed their own defense forces so forts and walls were built along the Silk Road for protection.

  7. Genghis Khan • When Genghis Khan unified the region as the Mongolian Empire, the Silk Road became an important path for communication. • Travel across the Silk Road was safe for a time under Mongol control. • Cultural diffusion - The movement of customs and ideas from one culture to another.

  8. Marco’s Adventures • Marco’s father introduced his son to China’s ruler, Kublai Khan. • Kublai Khan asked Marco to explore his kingdom. • Marco spent seventeen years working for the Khan and discovering new and mysterious things.

  9. Kublai Khan • Kublai Khan was China’s Mongol ruler. • Marco described his palace as having walls covered with gold and silver. • One hall was so big that “a meal might be served for more than 6,000 men.”

  10. Marco’s Return to Europe • He came home with the items that created quite a buzz in Europe… • Compass • Gunpowder • Vast array of colored silk • Noodles

  11. The Travels of Marco Polo • Upon returning to Venice, Marco became the captain of a Venetian ship. • Venice and Genoa, two Italian city-states, were involved in battle. • Marco was captured and thrown into prison. • While there his stories were written down. • Two hundred years later, The Travels of Marco Polo was published.

  12. Trade Routes to the East • For most European traders travel to Asia and back was too hard and took too much time. • In 1453 trade with the Far East was stopped by Muslim Turks after they captured the city of Constantinople. • A new trade route to China would have to be found.

  13. A New Trade Route? • Kingdoms in Europe began to explore the possibility of a water route to Asia. • They were not willing to give up the luxury goods they had become accustomed to. • Portugal was the first to search for a faster water route to China by sailing around Africa.

  14. Reasons for Exploration • It was long before Spain, England, and Italy joined Portugal in the search of new lands. • Why? Claiming new lands would: • Increase their territory – establish colonies • Increase their wealth – trade goods • Spread their religion- Christianity

  15. Video Summary

More Related