Marco Polo
(1254-1324) was an Italian merchant and traveler.
He was born in a
merchant family in Venice. He went to China with his father and uncle at the age
of 17. In 1275, he arrived in Shangdu (in today's Inner Mongolia) and became a
favorite of Kublai Khan (1214-1294). He assumed several official posts in
succession in the Yuan (1271-1368) court and served there for 17 years.
He traveled
across the whole of China and once visited Burma. In 1295, Marco returned to
Venice. There he commanded a galley in a war against the rival city of Genoa,
and was captured during the fighting and spent a year in a Genoese prison, where
one of his fellow-prisoners was a writer of romances named Rustichello of Pisa.
It was only when prompted by Rustichello that Marco Polo dictated the story of
his travels, known in his time as The Description of the World or The
Travels of Marco Polo.
His account of
the wealth of Cathay (China), the might of the Mongol empire, and the exotic
customs of India and Africa made his book the bestseller soon after. The book
became one of the most popular ones in medieval Europe and the impact of his
book on the contemporary Europe was tremendous.