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A20049 The history of trauayle in the VVest and East Indies, and other countreys lying eyther way, towardes the fruitfull and ryche Moluccaes As Moscouia, Persia, Arabia, Syria, Ægypte, Ethiopia, Guinea, China in Cathayo, and Giapan: vvith a discourse of the Northwest passage. Gathered in parte, and done into Englyshe by Richarde Eden. Newly set in order, augmented, and finished by Richarde VVilles.; De orbe novo. Decade 1-3. English Anghiera, Pietro Martire d', 1457-1526.; Eden, Richard, 1521?-1576.; Willes, Richard, fl. 1558-1573. 1577 (1577) STC 649; ESTC S122069 800,204 966

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Date trees and diuers other of the Ilande fruites so plentifullye that as they sayled along by the shore oftentymes the braunches thereof laden with flowres and fruites hong so ouer theyr heades that they might plucke them with theyr handes also that the fruitfulnes of this ground is eyther equall with the soyle of Isabella or better In Isabella he lefte only certayne sicke men and shippe wryghtes whom he had appoynted to make certayne carauels the residue of his men he conueighed to the south to saynt Dominickes towre After he had buylded this fortresse leauyng therin a garryson of .xx. men he with the remanent of his souldiers prepared them selues to searche the inner partes of the West syde of the Ilande hytherto knowen onely by name Therefore about .xxx. leagues that is fourescore and tenne myles from the fortresse he chaunced on the ryuer Naiba whiche we sayde to defende from the mountaynes of Cibaua ryght towarde the south by the myddest of the ilande When he had ouerpassed this ryuer with a companye of armed men diuyded into .xxv. decurions that is tenne in a company with theyr capitaynes he sent two decurions to the regions of those kynges in whose landes were the great woodds of brasile trees Inclyning towarde the lefte hande they founde the wooddes entred into them and felled the high and precious trees which were to that day vntouched Eche of the decurions filled certayne of the ilande houses with the trunkes of brasile there to be reserued vntil the shippes came which should cary them away But the Lieutenaunt directing his iourney towarde the right hande not farre from the bankes of y e riuer of Naiba founde a certaine kyng whose name was Beuchius Anacauchoa encamped against thinhabitantes of the prouince of Naiba to subdue them vnder his dominion as he had done many other kings of the iland borderers vnto him The palace of this great king is called Xaragua is situate toward the West ende of the ilande distant from the ryuer of Naiba .xxx. leagues All the prynces which dwell betwene the West ende his palace are ditionaries vnto him All that region from Naiba to the furthest marches of the west is vtterly without golde although it be full of mountaynes When the kyng had espied our men laying a part his weapons geuyng signes of peace he spake gentelly to them vncerteyne whether it were of humanitie or feare and demaunded of them what they woulde haue The Lieuetenaunt aunsweared That he should paye tribute to the Admirall his brother in the name of the Christian kyng of Spayne To whom he sayde Howe can you requyre that of me whereas neuer a region vnder my dominion bringeth forth golde For he had heard that there was a strange nation entred into the ilande whiche made great search for golde But he supposed that they desyred some other thyng The lieutenaunt answeared agayne God forbydde that we shoulde enioyne any man to paye such tribute as he myght not easely forbeare or such as were not engendered or growing in the region but we vnderstande that your regions bryng foorth great plentie of Gossampine cotton and hempe with such other wherof we desyre you to geue vs parte When he heard these woordes he promysed with cherefull countenaunce to geue hym as much of these thynges as he woulde requyre Thus dismissing his army and sending messengers before he him selfe accompanied the Lieutenaunt and brought him to his palace being distant as we haue sayde .xxx. leagues In al this tracte they passed through the iurisdiction of other princes beyng vnder his dominion Of the whiche some gaue them hempe of no lesse goodnes to make tackelinges for shyppes then our wood Other some brought bread and some gossamppne cotton And so euery of them payde trybute with suche commodities as theyr countreys brought foorth At the length they came to the kinges mansion place of Xaragua Before they entered into the palace a great multitude of the kynges seruauntes subiectes resorted to the court honorably after their maner to receyue their kyng Beuchius Anacauchoa with the strangers which he brought with him to see the magnificence of his court But now shal you heare howe they were intertained Among other triumphes and syghtes two are especially to be noted Fyrst there mette them a company of .xxx. women beyng al the kynges wyues and concubines bearyng in theyr handes branches of date trees singyng and daunsyng they were all naked sauyng that theyr pryuie partes were couered with breeches of gossampine cotton but the virgins hauyng theyr heare hangyng downe about their shoulders tyed about the forehead with a fyllet were vtterly naked They affirme that theyr faces breastes pappes handes and other partes of theyr bodyes were exceedyng smothe and well proportioned but somwhat inclynyng to a louely broune They supposed that they had seene those most beutyfull Dryades or the natyue nymphes or fayres of the fountaynes whereof the antiques spake so muche The braunches of date trees which they bore in theyr right handes when they daunced they delyuered to the Lieuetenaunt with lowe curtesy and smylyng countenaunce Thus enteryng into the kynges house they founde a delycate supper prepared for them after theyr maner When they were well refreshed with meate the nyght drawyng on they were brought by the kynges officers euery man to his lodgyng according to his degree in certayne of theyr houses about the pallaice where they rested them in hangyng beddes after the maner of the countrey wherof we haue spoken more largely in an other place The day folowyng they brought our men to their common hall into the whiche they come togeather as often as they make any notable games or triumphes as we haue sayde before Here after many daunsynges synginges maskinges runnynges wrestlyngs and other trying of mastryes sodaynly there appeared in a large plaine neere vnto the hal two great armies of men of warre whiche the kyng for his pastyme had caused to be prepared as the Spaniardes vse the playe with reedes which they call Iuga de Canias As the armies drewe neere togeather they assayled the one the other as fiersely as if mortall enimies with theyr baners spleade should fight for theyr goodes theyr landes theyr lyues theyr libertie theyr countrey theyr wyues theyr children so that within the momente of an houre foure men were slayne and many wounded The battayle also shoulde haue contynued longer yf the kyng had not at the request of our men caused them to ceasse The thyrde day the Lieuetenant counsaylyng the kyng to sowe more plentie of gossampine vppon the bankes neere vnto the waters syde that they myght the better paye theyr trybute pryuately accordyng to the multitude of theyr houses he prepayred to Isabella to vysite the sycke men whiche he had lefte there and also to see howe his woorkes went forwarde In the tyme of his absence .xxx. of his men were consumed with diuerse diseases Wherefore
hungrye he eateth all alone and the seruauntes are sometymes enforced to fast for the space of two or three dayes And if the maister intende to fare somewhat more delycately then he addeth thereto a litle portion of Swynes fleshe I speake not this of the best of them but of such as are of the meane sort The gouernours and captaynes of the armie do sometymes bydde the poorer sorte to theyr tables where they feede them selues so well that they fast two or three dayes after When they haue fruites Garlyke and Onyons they can well forbeare all other meates Proceedyng forwarde to the battayle they put more confidence in theyr multitude and with what great armies they assayle theyr enimies then eyther in the strength and valyauntnesse of theyr souldiers or in well instructyng theyr armie and fight better a farre of then at hand and therfore study howe to circumuent or inclose theyr enimies and to assayle them on the backe halfe They haue many trumpetters the which while they blow al at once after theyr maner make a maruelous straunge noyse They haue also another kynde of instrumentes which they call Szurna these they blow without ceassyng for the space of an houre togeather so temperyng the same and holdyng in the wynde whyle they draw more that the noyse seemeth continually without intermission They vse all one maner of apparell as longe coates without pleyghtes and with narrowe sleeues after the maner of the Hungarians These the Christians vse to butten on the ryght syde and the Tartars vseyng the lyke butten them on the lefte syde They weare redde and short buskyns that reache not to theyr knees and haue the soles thereof defended with plates of Iron In maner all theyr shyrtes are wrought with diuers coloures about the necke and haue the Collars and Ruffes beset with litle round Baules like Beades of Syluer or gylted Copper and some tyme Pearles also They gyrd them selues beneath the bellie euen as low as theyr pryuie members that they may seeme more burlye which they greatly esteeme as doo at this daye the Spanyardes Italians and Almanes The prouince of Moscouia is neyther very large nor fruitful forasmuch as the fertilitie is hindred with sandye ground which either with to much drynesse or moysture killeth the corne Furthermore immoderate and sharpe vntemperatenesse of the ayre whyle the colde of the wynter ouercommeth the heate of the Sunne sometymes doth not suffer the corne to rype For the colde is there sometymes so extreame that lyke as with vs in somer by reason of heate euen so there by extreame cold the earth hath many great chinckes or breaches Water also cast into the ayre and spytle fallyng from ones mouth are frosen before they touche the grounde I my selfe when I came thither in the yeere 1526. sawe the braunches of fruitfull trees wythered by the colde of the wynter be fore whiche was so extreame that many of theyr wagoners and carriers whom they call Gonecz were found frosen to death in theyr sleades There were some that at the same tyme leadyng and dryuing theyr cattayle from the next villages to Moscouia died by the way with their beastes through the extremitie of the colde Furthermore the same yeere many players that were accustomed to wander about the countrey with daunsing Beares were found dead in the high wayes Wilde Beares also enforced therto by famine left the woods and ran here and there into diuers villages and houses at whose commyng whyle the men of the countrey forsooke theyr houses and fledde into the fieldes many of them peryshed through the vehemencie of the cold Agayne it sometymes so chaunceth that in Sommer the heate is as extreame as in the yeere .1525 in the whiche almost all kyndes of pulse and grayne were scorched and burnt and suche a d●arth of corne folowed that drought that that which before was bought for three Dengas was afterward solde for twentie or thyrtie Furthermore also many villages woods and stackes of corne were set on fyre by the extreame heate the smoke wherof so fylled the region that the eyes of many were sore hurt therby There arose also as it were a darke and thycke myst without smoke whiche so molested the eyes that many lost theyr syght therby They sow and nouryshe the seedes of Melons with great diligence in certayne raysed beddes myxt with doung wherby they fynde a remedie both agaynst extreame cold and heat For if the heat exceede they make certayne ryftes in the beds as it were breathyng places lest the seedes shoulde be suffocate with to much heate And if the cold be extreame it is tempered with the heate of the mucke or doung Theyr beastes are much lesse then ours yet not all without hornes as one hath wrytten For I haue there seene Oxen Kine Goates and Rammes al with hornes Not farre from the citie of Mosca are certayne monasteries whiche a farre of seeme lyke vnto a citie They say that in this citie is an incredible number of houses and that the syxt yeere before my commyng thyther the prince caused them to be numbred and found them to be more then one and fourtie thousand fyue hundred houses The citie is very large and wyde and also very slabby and myrye by reason wherof it hath many bridges and causeyes The ayre of the region is so holsome that beyond the spryngs of Tanais especially towards the North and a great part also towards the East the pestilence hath not been hearde of synce the memorye of man Yet haue they sometymes a disease in theyr bowelles and heades not much vnlyke vnto the pestilence This disease they call a heate wherwith such as are taken dye within fewe dayes Some write that Iohn the Duke of Moscouia and Sonne of Basilius vnder the pretence of religion sacked spoyled the citie of Nouogradia and caried with hym from thence to Moscouia three hundred sleades laden with gold syluer and precious stones of the gooddes of the Archbishop the merchauntes citisins and strangers Solowki is an Ilande situate in the North sea eyght leagues from the continent betweene Duina and the prouince of Corela Howe farre it is distaunt from Moscouia can not be well knowen by reason of many Fennes Marishes wooddes and desolate places lying in the way Albeit some say that it is not three hundred leagues from Moscouia and twoo hundred from Bieloiesero In this Ilande is made great plentie of salte and it hath in it a monasterie into the which it is not lawfull for any woman or virgin to enter There is also great fyshyng for herryng They say that heere the Sunne at the sommer Equinoctiall shyneth continually except two houres Demetriowe is a citie with a Castell distante from Moscouia xii leagues declinyng from the West somewhat towarde the north By this runneth the riuer Lachroma that runneth into the ryuer of Sest Sest also receyueth the ryuer Dubna which vnladeth it selfe
that no man can beholde it without horrour and thus contynue their prayer a quarter of an houre When the tyme of eatyng approcheth they may not fal to theyr vittayles before some one of the gentlemen haue dressed it and set it in order But this custome is obserued onely among the gentelmen or noble men The women haue none other charge or care then to dresse and beautifie them selues for their husbandes vse not to haue to do with them before they be curyously washed and perfumed with sundrye sweete sauours When the women go abrode it is marueilous to beholde howe they are behanged with iewels and pretious stones on theyr eares armes and legges Of theyr maner of warre Cap. 10. THey haue in the citie certayne maisters of fence that teach them how to vse the swoord the target the launce and suche other weapons When the kyng proceedeth to the warres he is furnyshed with an armie of a hundred thousande footemen for of horsemen there is no vse but onely Elephantes For the kyng hym selfe rydeth on an Elephant They that are next to the kyng weare about theyr headdes fyllettes or bandes of sylke of crymisyn or scarlet colour Theyr weapons are certayne crooked swoordes targets launces and bowes The kynges ensigne is a certaine thyng made of bowes of trees implicate round like the couering of a tub borne vp on a reede This is borne so that y e shadow therof may couer the king from the heate of the Sunne and is in their tongue called Somler When both the armies approche within three arrowe shoote the kyng sendeth his Braminos into the tentes of his enimies in maner of haroldes to chalenge a hundred of them to come foorth if they dare to combat agaynst a hundred of his Naeres which before we said to be his gentelmen and chiefe strength of his army which message done both sydes prepare them selues to the battayle and in the midway fyrst a hundred fyght with a hundred The whiche if they shoulde feyght continually for the space of three dayes woulde neuer stryke with the poynt but with the edge of the swoorde and for the most parte at the head and seldome at the legges But when fyue or syxe are slayne incontinent the Bramini on both partes make an ende of the fyght and by theyr commaundement the retreate is sounded on both partes Then agayne the Bramini whiche are the chiefe priestes as we haue sayde on both sydes speake vnto the kynges and aske them if they wyll any more And thus for the most parte make they an ende of the quarell and battayle without great slaughter of men The kyng sometymes rydeth on an Elephant and sometymes also is borne by his noble men named Naeri When he proceedeth there folowe hym a great multitude of mynstrels makyng a great noyse with Tymberels Tamberets and suche other instrumentes The stypende of the Naeri is foure Carlines ▪ euery moneth in peace and syxe in tyme of warre these haue theyr teeth very blacke by eatyng of a certayne hearbe whiche they much vse When any of these are slayne their bodies are burned with great pompe and many superstitions and also theyr ashes reserued but the common sort are buryed in diuers maners for some are buried in their houses some in their gardens and other in feeldes medowes or wooddes They coyne mony here as in y e citie of Narsinga When I was there there was in y e citie merchants of almost all partes of the East and especially a great number of Mahumetans and many also of the region of Melacha and Bangella other also of Tarnassari Pego and Ciriomandel some lykewyse of the Ilandes of Zeylan and Sumatra whiche is Taprobana other of Cholon Caicolon and Bathecala and almost innumerable other of nations whose names are better knowen to vs as Persians Arabians Syrians Turkes and Ethiopians and also many of the kyngdome of Narsinga strangers of so many nations were in the citie of Calecut whyle I remayned there Understand furthermore that the Idolators vse not to sayl on the sea but that is appoynted to the Mahumetans as meeter men for that purpose And there is in the citie of Calecut more then fyfteene thousande Mahumetans whiche were borne in the same citie Of their Shippes and maner of saylyng on the sea Cap. 11. THeyr Shippes are made no lesse then may suffise for the burden of foure or fyue hundred Tonne all open without any couerture In the ioyntes of their Shippes they put no Lowe but ioyne the plankes so artificially that they holde out water very well yet do they pytche the ioyntes and make them fast with nayles of Iron They do not forbeare Towe for lacke therof for they haue great plentie of Hempe and Flaxe They haue plankes or boordes and postes of diuers sortes for they haue as good wood and better then we Theyr sayles are of Bombasine cloth and doubled in the neather part whereby they geather more wynde and swell therewith lyke a bagge and in this they passe vs vsyng but only syngle sayles They vse ankers of marble of the length of eyght spannes and on euery syde twoo these they hang in the sea by double ropes and besyde these haue none other ankers They haue certayne appoynted tymes and seasons of saylyng for some tymes serue best for one coast and some other for other coastes and viages The changes and also contrarietie of tymes is there greatly to be consydered for when with vs al thynges for heate are almost scorched then haue they large shewres as in the monethes of May Iune and Iuly Their shippes are of diuers quantities as with vs and therfore also of diuers names They haue one sort of vessels made of one whole pece of wood like a trough veri long sharpe and narowe in these they vse both sayles and ores and are therfore swyfter then our Galleys or Foystes The Pirates vse these very much The best of their shippes are made in an Ilande named Porcai not farre from Calecut Of the Court or Palace of the kyng of Calecut Cap. 12. THe Palace of the kyng of Calecut conteyneth no lesse then a myle in circuite the wall is not hygh the buyldyng is fayre with beames or pos●es wel ioynyng the frame and curiously wrought and carued with the figures shapes of deuyls on euery syde Why the walles be no hygher we haue declared before where we haue spoken of the lowe buyldyng of the houses of the citie the cause wherof as we haue saide is the vnstable grounde so ful of water that they can dygge no deapth to lay fundation to beare hygher buyldynges But what pearles and precious stones the kyng weareth vpon hym can not be expressed for the greatnesse of the thyng for doubtlesse it exceedeth all estimation Although at the tyme of my beyng there he was not geuen to ioyfulnesse but lyued in
resolued into sande This masse of golde I mee selfe sawe in Castile in the famous Citie of Metbymna Campi where the Court lay al that wynter I sawe also a great peece of pure Electrum of the which belles and Apothecaries morters many suche other vesselles and instrumentes may be made as were in olde tyme of copper the citie of Corinthus This peece of Electrum was of suche weight that I was not only with both my handes vnable to lift it from the ground but also not of strength to remoue it eyther one way or other they affirmed that it weyed more then three hundred pounde weyght after eyght ounces to the pounde it was founde in the house of a certayne prynce and left hym by his predecessours and albeit that in the dayes of the inhabitauntes yet lyuyng Electrum was no where digged yet knewe they where the myne thereof was but our men with muche adoo coulde hardely cause them to shewe them the place they bore them suche priuie hatred yet at the length they brought them to the myne beyng now ruinate and stopped with stones and rubbyshe it is muche easyer to dygge then is the iron myne and might be restored agayne yf myners and other workmen skylful therein were appoynted thereto Not farre from the towre of Conception in the same mountaynes is founde great plentie of Amber and out of certaine rockes of the same distilleth a substance of the yelowe colour whiche the Paynters vse Not farre from these mountaynes are many great woods in the whiche are none other trees then Brasile which the Italians cal Verzino But here perhaps ryght noble prynce you woulde aske what should be the cause that where as the Spanyardes haue brought out of these Ilandes certayne shyppes laden with Brasile somewhat of Gossampine cotton a quantitie of Amber a lytle golde some spyces why they haue not brought suche plentie of golde and suche other ryche marchaundizes as the fruitefulnesse of these regions seeme to promyse To this I aunswere that when Colonus the Admirall was lykewyse demaunded the cause hereof he made aunswere that the Spanyardes whiche he tooke with hym into these regions were geuen rather to sleepe play and idlenesse then to labour and were more studious of sedition and newes then desirous of peace and quietnesse also that being geuen to licenciousnesse they rebelled forsooke him findyng matter of false accusation against hym because he went about to represse theyr outragiousnesse by reason whereof he was not yet able to breake the power of the inhabitauntes and freelye to possesse the full dominion of the Ilande and these hynderaunces to be the cause that hytherto the gaynes haue scarsely counteruayled the charges albeit euen this yeere whyle I wrote these thyngs at your request they geathered in two monethes the summe of a thousande and two hundred poundes weyght of gold But because we entende to speake more largely of these thynges in theyr place we wyll nowe returne from whence we haue digressed When the inhabitauntes perceiued that they coulde by no meanes shake the yoke from theyr necks they made humble supplication to the Admiral that they myght stande to theyr tribute and applye them selues to reincrease the fruites of theyr countrey beyng nowe almost wasted He graunted them theyr request and appoynted suche order that euery region shoulde pay theyr tribute with the commodities of theyr countreys accordyng to theyr portion and at suche tyme as they were agreed vpon but the violent famine did frustrate al these appoyntmentes for al the trauayles of theyr bodyes were scarcelye able to suffise to fynde them meate in the wooddes whereby to susteyne theyr lyues beyng of long tyme contented with rootes and the fruites of wylde trees yet many of the kynges with theyr people euen in this extreme necessitie brought part of theyr tribute most humblye desyryng the Admiral to haue compassion of their calamities and to beare with them yet a whyle vntyl the Ilande were restored to the olde state promysyng further that that whiche was nowe wantyng shoulde then be double recompenced But fewe of the inhabitauntes of the mountaynes of Cibaua kept theyr promise because they were sorer oppressed with famine then anye of the other They say that the inhabitantes of these mountaynes dyffer no lesse in language and manners from them whiche dwel in the playnes then among vs the rusticalles of the countrey from the gentlemen of the courte wheras notwithstanding they lyue as it were both vnder one portion of heauen and in many thinges much after one fashion as in nakednesse and rude simplicitie But nowe let vs returne to Caunaboa the king of the house of golde beyng in captiuitie When he perceiued hym selfe to be ●ast in prison frettyng and gratyng his teeth as it had been a Lion of Libia and dayly and nyghtly deuysyng with hym selfe howe he myght be delyuered beganne to perswade the Admiral that forasmuche as he had nowe taken vnto his dominion the region of Cipanga or Cibaua wherof he was king it shoulde be expedient to sende thyther a garrison of Christian men to defende the same from the incursions of his olde enimies and borderers for he sayde that it was signified vnto him that the countrey was wasted and spoyled with suche incursions By this craftie deuise he thought to haue brought to passe that his brother whiche was in that region and the other his kynsfolkes and frendes with theyr adherentes should haue taken eyther by sleight or force as many of our men as myght haue redeemed hym But the Admiral vnderstandyng his craftie meanyng sent Hoieda with suche a companye of men as myght vanquishe the Cibauians yf they shoulde moue warre agaynst them Our men had scarcelye entred into the region but the brother of Caunaboa came agaynst them with an armie of fyue thousande naked men armed after theyr manner with clubbes arrowes tipt with bones and speares made harde at the endes with fyre He stole vpon our men beyng in one of theyr houses and encamped rounde about the same on euery syde This Cibauian as a man not ignorant in the discipline of warre about the distaunce of a furlong from the house diuided his armie into fyue battayles appoyntyng to euery one of them a circuite by equall diuision and placed the froont of his owne battayle directly agaynst our men When he had thus set his battayles in good aray he gaue certayne signes that y e whole armie should marche forwarde in order with equall paces and with a larome freshly assayle theyr enimies in such sort that none might escape But our men iudging it better to encountre with one of the battayles then to abyde the brunt of the whole armie gaue onset on the mayne battayle aranged in the playne because that place was most commodious for the horsmen When the horsmen therefore had geuen the charge they ouerthrewe them with the brestes of theyr horses and slue as
noble man and a knyght of the order of Galatraua of whiche order all are called Commendatores this kings desyre was to be named after him Kyng Commendator therefore frendly receiued Ancisus gaue him great abundance of al thinges necessarie But what Ancisus learned of theyr religion during the tyme of his remaynyng there I haue thought good to aduertise your holynesse You shal therfore vnderstande that certayne of our men saylyng by the coastes o● 〈◊〉 left with kyng Commendator a certayne poore Maryner beyng diseased who in short space recoueryng his health and hauyng nowe somewhat learned theyr language began to growe into great estimation with the kyng and his subiectes insomuche that he was oftentimes the kynges Lieuetenant in his warres agaynst other princes his borderers This mans fortune was so good that al thynges prospered well that he tooke in hande and albeit that he were not learned yet was he a vertuous and well meanyng man accordyng to his knowledge and dyd religiouslye honour the blessed virgin bearyng euer about with him her pycture fayre paynted vpon paper and sowed in his apparel neere vnto his brest signifiyng vnto the kyng that this holynes was the cause of al his victories perswading him to doo the like and to cast away all his Zemes which were none other then the similitudes of euill spirites most cruell enimies and deuourers of our soules and to take vnto him the holy virgin and mother of God to be his patronesse if he desyred all his affayres aswel in warre as in peace to succeede prosperously also that the blessed virgyn woulde at no tyme fayle hym but be euer redye to helpe him and his if they woulde with deuout hartes call vppon her name The maryner had soone perswaded the naked nation and therevppon gaue the king who demaunded the same his pycture of the virgin to whom he buylded and dedicated a chapell and an alter euer after contemning and reiecting his Zemes. Of these Zemes made of gossampine cotton to the similitudes of spirites walking in the nyght which they oftentimes see and speake with them familyerly we haue spoken sufficiently in the nyenth booke of the first Decade Furthermore according to the institution of this maryner when the sonne draweth towarde the fall this king Commendator with al his famyly both men and women resort daylye to the saide chapell of the virgin Marie where kneeling on theyr knees and reuerently bowing downe theyr heades holdyng theyr hands ioyned together they salute the image of the virgin with these woordes Aue Maria Aue Maria for fewe of them can rehearse any more wordes of this prayer At Ancisus his being there they tooke hym and his felowes by the handes and ledde them to this chapell with reioysing saying that they woulde shewe them marueylous thinges When they were entred they poynted with theyr fyngers to the Image of the virgyn al to be set and hanged about with ouches and iewels and many earthen pottes fylled some with sundry meates and some with water rounde about all the tabernacle for these thinges they offer to the image in the steede of sacrifice according to theyr olde superstition towarde theyr Zemes. Being demaunded why they dyd thus they answered Lest the image should lacke meate if perhaps it should be a hungred for they most certainly beleue that images may hunger and that they doo eate drinke But what ayde and helpe they confesse that they haue had of the godly power of this image that is of the blessed virgyn it is a thing woorthy to be heard and most assuredly to bee taken for a trueth for by the report of our men there is such feruent godly loue and zeale in these simple men toward the holy virgin that to them being in the daunger of warre agaynst theyr enimies they doo in maner yf I may so terme it compel her to descende from heauen to helpe them in theyr necessities For such is the goodnes of God that he hath left vnto men in maner a pryce whereby we may purchase hym with his holy angels sayntes that is to witte burnyng loue charitie and zeale Howe therfore can the blessed virgin at any time be absent from them which call for her helpe with pure faith and feruent loue Commendator him selfe with al his noble men and gentelmen doo testifie with one voyce that in a fought battayle in the whiche this maryner was capitaine bearing with him this picture of the virgin Marie the Zemes of theyr enimies turned their backes and trembled in the presence of the virgins image and in the sight of them all for euerye of them bryng theyr Zemes to the battaile hoping by theyr helpe to obteine the victorie Yea they say further that during the time of the battaile they saw not only an Image but a liuely woman clothed in fayre and white apparel ayding them against theyr enimies which thing also the enimies them selues acknowledged confessyng that on the contrary part she appeared to them shakyng a scepter in her hande with threatenyng countenance whiche caused theyr hartes to shake and faint for feare but after that this Maryner departed from them being taken into a shyppe of certayne Christians passyng by those coastes Commendator declared that he with al his subiectes continually obserued his institutions insomuch that beyng at contention with another prince whiche of theyr Zemes were most holy and of greatest power the matter grewe to such extremitie that they tryed it with hande strokes and that in all these attemptes the blessed virgin neuer fayled hym but was euer present in the brunt of the battayle and gaue hym easie victorie with a smal power of men against a maine armie of his enimies Beyng demaunded with what woordes they cryed vpon the virgin Mary when they assayled theyr enimies they answered that they had learned no other wordes of the Maryners doctrine but Sancta Maria adiuua nos Sancta Maria adiuua nos That is holy Marie helpe vs holy Marie helpe vs and this also in the Spanishe tongue for he had left these wordes in the mouthes of all men Whyle they murthered and destroyed them selues thus on both sydes they fell to entreatie of peace and agreed to trye the matter not hande to hande by combatte of certayne chosen for both parties as the maner was among the Romanes and diuers other nations in the old tyme or by any sleight or policie but that two young men shoulde be chosen for eche partie one with theyr handes bounde faste behynde them in the playne fyelde bothe parties beyng sworne to acknowledge that Zemes to be the better which fyrst loosed the bandes of the young man which stoode bounde for the tryall of his religion Thus diuidyng them selues and placyng the sayd young men before them in the syght of them all with theyr handes fast bounde by theyr enimies the contrary parte called fyrst on theyr Zemes that
the prince of Ierusalem al at once In the tyme of haruest and geatheryng of fruites he is geuen wholy to praye and robbyng and with great subtiltie deceyueth the Arabians for when they thynke hym to be a myle or two of he is with them sodenly betymes in the mornyng and inuadyng theyr landes carryeth away theyr fruites Wheate and Barlye euen as he fyndeth it in the sackes and so lyueth contynually day and nyght with suche incursions When his Mares be weeried with continuall runnyng he resteth a whyle and to refreshe them geueth them Camelles mylke to drynke to coole them after theyr great labour Those Mares are of such marueylous swyftnesse that when I presently sawe them they seemed rather to flee then to runne Note also that these Arabians ryde on horses only couered with certayne clothes or mattes and weare none other vesture then only an inwarde coate or peticoate for weapon they vse a certayne long Dart of Reedes of the length of ten or twelue cubites poynted with Iron after the maner of Iauelyns and frynged with sylke When they attempt any incursyons they marche in suche order that they seeme to go in troupes they are of despicable and litle stature and of coloure betweene yealowe and blacke which some call Oliuastro They haue the voyces of women and the heare of theyr head long and blacke and layde out at large They are of greater multitude then a man woulde beleeue and are among them selues at contynuall stryfe and warre They inhabite the mountaynes and haue certayne tymes appoynted to robberye for this purpose they obserue especially the tyme when they are certayne of the passage of the Pylgryms and other that iorney that way to Mecha then lyke theeues they lye in the way and robbe them When they make these theeuysh inuasions they bryng with them theyr wyues chyldren families and all the goodes they haue Theyr houses they put vpon the Camelles for other houses haue they none but lyue onlye in tentes and pauylyons as do our Souldiers Suche tabernacles are made of blacke wooll and that rough and fylthy But to returne to our viage The eleuenth day of April departed from Mezaris a company of Camels which companie they call the Carauana to the number of .xxxv. thousand with fourtie thousand men But we were no more then threescore persons of whom the Mamalukes had taken the charge to guyde and garde vs and the Carauana of our companie whiche the Mamalukes diuided into three partes as some in the fronte other in the myddest of the army and other in a wyng after the maner of a halfe Moone inclosyng the whole armie for in this order march the peregrines which iorney in these regions as hereafter we wyll further declare But you shall fyrst vnderstand that Damasco is from Mecha fourtie dayes and fourtie nyghtes iorney Departyng therefore from Mezaris we continued our iorney that day vntyll the .xxii. houre of the day Then our Captayne and guide Agmirus after he had geuen the watch woorde and signe commaunded that euerye man shoulde rest and remayne in the place where the signe shoulde be geuen them Therefore as soone as they hearde the signe by the sound of a Trumpet they stayed and after they had vnburdened theyr Camels spent there two houres to victual them selues and theyr beastes then the Captayne geuyng a newe signe chargyng theyr Camelles agayne they departed speedyly from thence Euery Camell hath at one feedyng fyue Barly loaues rawe and not baked as bygge as a Pomegranate Takyng Horse they continued that iorney the daye and nyght folowyng vntyll xxii houres of the day and at that houre they obserue the order whiche we haue spoken of herebefore Euery eyght daye they drawe water by dyggyng the grounde or sande by the way neuerthelesse somewhere are founde Welles and Sesternes Also euery eyght daye they rest theyr Camelles two dayes to recouer theyr strength The Camelles are laden with incredible Burdens and double charge that is to meane the burden of two great Mules They drynke but once in three dayes Of the strength and valiantnesse of the Mamalukes Cap. 9. WHen they tary and rest them at the waters aforesayde they are euer enforced to conflict with a great multitude of the Arabians but the battayle is for the most parte without bloodshed For although we haue often tymes fought with them yet was there only one man slayne on our parte for these Arabians are so weake and feeble that threescore Mamalukes haue often put to the worst fyftie thousande Arabians For these feelde Arabians whiche are called Pagani are not in strength or force of armes to be compared to the Mamalukes of whose actiuitie I haue seene great experience among the whiche this is one A certayne Mamaluke layde an Apple vppon the head of his seruant at the distance of about .xii. or .xiiii. pases stroke it of from his head I sawe lykewyse an other who ryding on a sadled horse with full course for they vse saddles as we doe tooke of the saddle from the horse styll runnyng and for a space bearyng it on his head put it agayne on the horse styll continuing his full course Of the cities of Sodoma and Gomorrha Cap. 10. PAssyng the iourney of twelue dayes we came to the playne or valley of Sodoma and Gomorrha where we founde it to be true that is written in holy scripture for there yet remayne the ruynes of the destroyed citie as witnesse of Gods wrath We may affyrme that there are three cities and eche of them situate on the declining of three hylles and the ruines doe appeare about the heyght of three or foure cubites There is yet seene I wotte neare what lyke blood or rather lyke redde waxe myxte with earth It is easie to beleeue that those men were infected with most horrible vices as testifieth the baren drye filthie and vnholsome region vtterly without water Those people were once fedde with Manna but when they abused the gyft of God they were sore plagued Departyng twentie myles from these cities about thirtie of our company peryshed for lacke of water and dyuers other were ouerwhelmed with sande Goyng somewhat further forewarde we founde a little mountayne at the foote whereof we founde water and therefore made our abode there The day folowyng early in the mornyng came vnto vs xxiiii â–ª thousande Arabians askyng money for the water which we had taken We answered that we would paye nothyng bycause it was gyuen vs by the goodnesse of God Immediatly we came to hand strokes We geatheryng our selues togeather on the sayde mountayne as in the safest place vsed our Camelles in the steede of a bulwarke and placed the merchauntes in the myddest of the army that is in the myddest of the Camelles whyle we fought manfully on euery syde The battayle continued so long that water fayled both vs and our enemies in the space
of two dayes The Arabians compassed about the mountayne crying and threatenyng that they would breake in among the Camelles at the length to make an ende of the conflicte our Captayne assemblyng the merchauntes commaunded a thousande and two hundred peeces of golde to be giuen to the Arabians who when they had receyued the money sayde that the summe of ten thousande peeces of golde should not satisfie them for the water which we had drawen Whereby we perceyued that they began further to quarell with vs and to demaunde some other thing then money Wherevppon incontinent our Captayne gaue commaundement that whosoeuer in all our companie were able to beare armes should not mount vppon the Camelles but should with all expedition prepare them selues to fyght The day folowyng in the mornyng sendyng the Camelles before and inclosyng our army beyng about three hundred in number we met with the enemies and gaue the onset In this conflicte we lost only a man and a woman and had none other domage we slue of the Arabians a thousande and fyue hundred Whereof you neede not marueyle if you consyder that they are vnarmed and weare only a thynne loose vesture and are besyde almost naked theyr horses also beyng as euyll furnished and without saddles or other furniture Of a mountayne inhabited with Iewes and of the citie of Medinathalhabi where Mahumet was buried Cap. 11. IN the space of eyght dayes we came to a mountayne whiche conteyneth in circuite ten or twelue myles This is inhabited with Iewes to the number of fyue thousande or thereabout They are of very little stature as of the heyght of fyue or sixe spannes and some muche lesse They haue small voyces lyke women and of blacke colour yet some blacker then other They feede of none other meate then Goates fleshe They are circumcised and deny not them selues to bee Iewes If by chaunce any Mahumetan come into their handes they slay him alyue At the foote of the mountayne we founde a certayne hole out of the whiche flowed aboundaunce of water By fyndyng this oportunitie we laded sixtiene thousand Camels which thyng greatly offended the Iewes They wandred in that mountayne scattered lyke wylde Goates or Prickettes yet durst they not come downe partly for feare and partly for hatred agaynst the Mahumetans Beneath the mountayne are seene seuen or eyght thorne trees very fayre and in them we founde a payre of Turtle Doues which seemed to vs in maner a miracle hauyng before made so long iourneyes and sawe neyther beast nor foule Then proceedyng two dayes iourney we came to a certayne citie named Medinathalhabi foure myles from the sayd citie we founde a well Heere the Carauana that is the whole hearde of the Camelles rested And remayning here one day we washed our selues and chaunged our shertes the more freshely to enter into the citie it is well peopled and conteyneth about three hundred houses the walles are lyke bulwarkes of earth and the houses both of stone and bricke The soile about the citie is vtterly barren except that about two myles from the citie are seene about fyftie palme trees that beare Dates There by a certayne garden runneth a course of water fallyng into a lower playne where also passingers are accustomed to water theyr Camelles And heere oportunitie nowe serueth to confute the opinion of them whiche thynke that the Arke or Toombe of wicked Mahumet in Mecha to hang in the ayre not borne vp with any thyng As touchyng which thyng I am vtterly of an other opinion and affirme this neyther to be true nor to haue any lykenesse of trueth as I presently behelde these thynges and sawe the place where Mahumet is buried in the sayde citie of Medinathalhabi for we taryed there three dayes to come to the true knowledge of all these thynges When wee were desirous to enter into theyr Temple which they call Meschita and all other churches by the same name we coulde not be suffered to enter without a companion little or great They takyng vs by the hande brought vs to the place where they saye Mahumet is buried Of the Temple or Chapell and Sepulchre of Mahumet and of his felowes Cap. 12. HIs Temple is vaulted and is a hundred pases in length and fourescore in breadth the entry into it is by two gates from the sydes it is couered with three vaultes it is borne vp with iiii hundred columnes or pillers of white brick there are seene hanging lampes about the number of .3 thousande From the other part of the Temple in the first place of the Meschita is seene a Tower of the circuite of fyue pases vaulted on euery syde and couered with a cloth of silke and is borne vp with a grate of copper curiously wrought and distant from it two pases and of them that goe thyther is seene as it were through a lattesse Towarde the lefte hande is the way to the Tower and when you come thyther you must enter by a narower gate On euery side of those gates or doores are seene many bookes in maner of a Librarie on the one syde .xx. and on the other syde xxv These contayne the filthie traditions and lyfe of Mahumet and his fellowes within the sayde gate is seene a Sepulchre that is a digged place where they say Mahumet is buried and his felowes which are these Nabi Bubacar Othomar Aumar and Fatoma But Mahumet was theyr chiefe Captayne and an Arabian borne Hali was sonne in lawe to Mahumet for he tooke to wyfe his daughter Fatoma Bubacar is he who they say was exalted to the dignitie of a chiefe counseller and great gouernour although he came not to the hygh degree of an Apostle or prophet as dyd Mahumet Othomar and Aumar were chiefe Captaynes of the army of Mahumet Euery of these haue their proper bookes of theyr factes and traditions And hereof proceedeth the great dissention and discorde of religion and maners among this kynde of filthie men whyle some confirme one doctrine and some an other by reason of theyr diuers sectes of patrons Doctours and saintes as they call them By this meanes are they marueylously diuided among them selues and lyke beastes kyll them selues for such quarelles of dyuers opinions and all false This also is the chiefe cause of warre betweene the Sophie of Persia and the great Turke beyng neuerthelesse both Mahumetans and lyue in mortall hatred one agaynst the other for the mayntenaunce of theyr sectes Sainctes and Apostles whyle euery of them thynketh theyr owne to bee best Of the Secte of Mahumet Cap. 13. NOw will we speake of the maners and sect of Mahumet Understande therefore that in the highest part of the Tower aforesayd is an open rounde place Now shall you vnderstande what crafte they vsed to deceyue our Carauana The first euenyng that we came thyther to see the Sepulchre of Mahumet our Captaine sent for the chiefe priest of the Temple to come to him and
Brigantine sawe this he tooke certayne emptie Tubbes in the whiche gunne pouder had ben kepte before and stoppyng them with flaxe placed them in such sort that they seemed far of like peeces of great artillerie then laying a little gun pouder by the flaxe and holding a fyre sticke in his hand as though he would put fire to the Gunne the Mahumetans thinking that it had ben a gunne in deede were thereby put in such feare that they departed The Admirall yet further pursuing the enemyes gaue them an other great ouerthrow and tooke seuen of theyr Foistes laden with all sortes of merchandies and soonke tenne other with the shotte of great artillerie of the whiche one was laden with Elephantes Therfore when the Mahumetans sawe the sea now almost couered with the bodies of their slaine men and their chiefe shippes some taken some soonke some spoiled were out of all hope to recouer therfore saued them selues by fleeing But the Christians seeing yet hope of further victorie and the Mahumetans so discouraged thought it not best to leaue them so but rather vppon such prosperous successe to take the oportunitie and vtterly to destroy them therfore the Admiral seeing his men ioyfull of the victorie and desirous to pursue the enemie folowed the Mahumetans and gaue them a newe battayle whiche lasted all day and all nyght whilest the Christians in the nyght tyme slue them euen in theyr fleeing soonke almost all their shippes In the meane tyme certayne of our Foistes sawe a shyppe of burden of the enemie wanderyng out of the way and made sayle thyther with all hast But the enemies in short space seeing them selues ouermatched hurled all their cariages into the sea and trusting to swimmyng wherein they are most experte caste them selues after But our men folowed them euen to the shore with launces crosbowes stones so killing them as they swamme that the sea was coloured and polluted with their blood Yet by swimming many escaped by estimation about the number of two hundred for they are in youth so brought vp in swimming that they swamme in the sea almost twentie myles oftentymes so diuyng vnder the water and remaynyng there so long that they deceyued our syght for sometymes we thought that they were soonke and sometyme agayne seeyng them flote on the water it so troubled our sense that we thought we had seene some phantasie or vision but they were in maner all destroyed by one mischaunce or an other and especially a great number in the great shyppes which were soonke by shot of the great artillerie The day folowyng the Admirall sent certayne Brigantines and Gallies to the shore to number the dead bodies whiche the sea had caste vp they were founde to be about three thousande besyde them also which the sea had deuoured The kyng of Canonor beholdyng all these thynges was greatly in loue with the Christians and commended their valiauntnesse and vertue and not vnwoorthily For to speake that I haue seene I haue ben in many sore warres yet neuer sawe I more valiant men then the Portugales here shewed them selues to be But when we thought that we had nowe made an ende of these Tragidies we had in maner a woorse to begyn For it so chaunced that in fewe dayes after the kyng of Canonor who fauoured vs dyed In whose place succeeded an other mortall enemie to the Christians and friende to the kyng of Calecut by whose helpe and rychesse hee was aduaunced to the kyngdome of Canonor He therefore assembled his power to make newe warre agaynst the Christians with great expedition and haste bycause he supposed that a great parte of theyr munitions was nowe wasted and they also sore weeryed and for the most parte wounded And to further his attempte the kyng of Calecut sent him xxiiii peeces of great artillerie This warre beganne the seuenth day of Aprill and continued vntyll the .xx. of August before all thinges were pacified It were heere to long to declare howe in these warres also the Christians behaued them selues manfully agaynst the Mahumetans which neuer encountred with them fewer then fyue or sixe and twentie thousande in number hauyng also with them a hundred and fourtie peeces of artillerie and were armed after the maner of the inhabitauntes of Calecut but the Christians with harnesse after our maner These Infidelles vse this order in theyr warres They diuide theyr army into many wynges euery wyng conteynyng the number of two or three thousande men and only one wyng proceedeth to the battayle the reste attendyng what ende or success● they haue before they attempt any further But whilest these wynges are nowe marchyng to ioyne in battayle it passeth all imagination to thynke with howe great a noyse of innumerall musicall instrumentes after theyr maner they fill the eares of all the army to encourage them to fyght while in the meane season also a great number runneth before the army with marueylous flames of artificiall fyres and in fine gyue the onsette with suche outragious furie and outcry that two thousande of them were able to feare tenne thousande that had no experience of these thynges But see the goodnesse of God who neuer forsaketh them that beleeue faythfully in his holy religion Euen nowe in the extremitie of these troubles our men beyng in maner ouercharged with the multitude of theyr enemyes and long warres sodayne newes was brought that a newe nauie of Portugales was arryued at Canonor by the conducte of the valiant knyght Don Tristan dè Cugna Whom we immediately aduertysed with howe greeuous warres wee were oppressed Who incontinent sent vs in certayne Barkes three hundred valiaunt Souldiours well armed with harnesse after the maner of the Christians When wee sawe these we recouered our spirites in suche sorte that if our Admirall woulde haue permitted we woulde haue burnte the citie of Canonor But when the Mahumetans vnderstoode the newe succours that we had all discouraged in mynde they sought all meanes to make peace with the Christians and assygned one named Mamalmaricar a man of great ryches and wysedome among them to bee intermediatour and to make the conditions of peace Hee therefore vnder safe conducte came to vs to common of the matter We tolde him that we coulde make no peace without the consent of the Uiceroye who was then in the citie of Cucin The Admirall thought it beste not to contempne the conditions of peace for for that duryng the tyme of the warres they coulde not sende theyr shyppes laden with merchaundies into Portugale and therefore by the consent of the Uiceroye the peace was concluded But nowe to myngle some delight with these sorowes you shal heare a pleasant fable woorthie to be put in memorie Therefore all thinges beyng pacified as I walked in the citie of Canonor I met with certayne merchantes Idolatours with whom I was acquaynted before the
at the same place where Muteezuma tooke his deaths wound Cortesius exhorted them to peace otherwise threatning the vtter decay ruine of that their so famous and noble a citie with protestation of pietie on them whom once he had taken to be his friendes promising pardon for that which was done and settyng downe what befel vnto other nations that refused his friendshyp The Mexicans making small accompte of his woordes answered that they tooke him for no friend but for their enemy that he should depart with all his trayne out of their countrey if he would haue peace otherwise they woulde so long continue theyr siege vntill by force they had dryuen him out though for euery Spanyarde slayne there dyed a thousande Mexicans for his friendshyp they cared not pardon they asked not most willingly they would all dye so that they might deliuer their posteritie from the Spanyshe tyranny Wherefore Cortesius waying with him selfe the great daunger that presently might ensue for want of victualles if he stayed the Mexicans continuing their assalte for perill to be stopped at the draught bridges if he departed so muche the more for that these Barbares were not ignorant of .70 thousand ducates heaped vp togeather by him in that prouince set vppon them the seconde tyme with the aforesayde engines but all in vayne So stoutly their enemyes defended them selues and so fiercely they resisted the assalte giuen Chiefly the Spaniardes courage appeared in winnyng of a certayne Tower that alwayes commaunded them nexte in the ruine of such houses as for the nearenes thereof bred them great incombrance and perill After many woundes receyued and great slaughter done on both sides the principal citizens counterfectyng a conclusion of peace promysed obedience vnto Cortesius so that all deedes past myght be forgotten Cortesius lykyng well thereof at their request set free a priest he had of theirs in prison to deale betwyxt them and throughly persuaded that no guyle was ment withdrew his company from skirmishing But he was no sooner set downe to dynner after his restlesse afflictions and continuall labours but the Mexicans tooke the towne bridges and voyded the trenches which Cortesius for passage had caused to be filled vp Presently therefore he rushed out amongst them agayne with his horsemen but the iourney went so hardly with the Spanyardes that Cortesius wounded in the head was scarsly able to retyre agayne many of his company were slayne such as escaped were not able to continue in the fielde any longer wearyed with blowes worne out with hunger It remayned only that now they eyther presently must peryshe or els depart out of the countrey By nyght therefore Cortesius and his souldyers priuely thought to slyp away with Muteezumaies children and certayne of the Mexican nobles captiues charging the Spanysh kyng his officers with the fif●h part of his treasure and takyng the residue thereof with him But the Barbares hauyng intelligence thereof oppressed them in the way tooke theyr goods slue many of the Spaniards and with them their captiues if happely any escaped they were such as marched in the most for both the vangarde and rereward were altogeather discomfited and lost to the number of .150 Spanyardes 42. horses .2000 Tascaltecans and Guazuzings that ayded them Thus paynefully with great daunger and no lesse griefe Cortesius lefte Themistitan pursued by his enemyes that folowed him nothyng holpen by the way as he repayred home refreshyng his Campe with a dead horse after fyue dayes spent with the foode of parched corne and that in small quantitie before he came to Tascalteca The Tascaltecans curtuously enterteyned him and his with whom he made his abode .20 dayes to refreshe his wearyed army that done he conquered other cities in that prouince eyther enemyes vnto the Tascaltecans as Tepeaca where he buylte for safetie of passage Segura la Frontera or suche as for feare of the Mexicans had not yeelded them selues before to wyt Guaccachiulla Izzuca and other principall townes therabout Finally he sendeth for horsemen and shot out of the Ilande Hispaniola wynneth many Barbares fauour assistance agaynst the Mexicans maketh prouision of .13 flye Boates to annoye by water the citizens of Themistitan Meteezumaes Nepheu Catamazinus the new kyng of Mexico fearyng on the other syde the Spanyardes returne and seeing many of his subiectes to fall from him wanteth not in any wyse to set all thinges in a readinesse for warres especially pykes to annoye the horsemen whom they most dreaded Eightiene leagues from Tascalteca towardes Themistitan standeth Tazuco a goodly citie of the Mexicans Cortesius fyrst of all tooke this citie caused his prouision for fly Boates wrought in Tascalteca to be brought thyther Such was the hatred of the Tascaltecans and Guazuzings agaynst the Mexicans that they carried the tymber vppon theyr shoulders from Tascalteca to Tazuco without any grudging for the prouision aforesayde From Tazuco Cortesius cut a passage into the salte Mare of Mexico to bryng his flye Boates to the siege of Themistitan this trenche three Englyshe myles long and foure fathome deepe was finyshed by .8000 pyoners of that countrey in fyftie dayes This nauy annoyed very muche the citizens in destroying theyr sculles and troughes and stopping their passage from place to place besydes the assal●e giuen therewith to the towne it selfe Cortesius army euer as it came destroyed all suche places by the way that either persecuted him fleeing away before or presently might domage his returne The citie he besieged in three places at once after that hee had cutte of all the freshe water conductes and taken the wayes and bridges and stopped all passage for any enemy of his into the towne the number of his souldiers amounted vnto .120000 for out of all the countrey about the Barbares came with Cortesius some for libertie some for friendshyp some for hope of gaine The siege lasted neuerthelesse ten weekes in the ende whereof with continuall battry the citie defaced and more than .100000 citizens worne out partly in fight and partly wasted with misery and hunger Cortesius tooke theyr new kyng priuely walkyng in a secret corner of the lake and subdued throughly with him the citie Themistitan .14 townes by the lake syde all the Mexican realme and prouince vnto the Spanyshe crowne in the iurisdiction whereof it doeth presently remayne The spoyle of the citie in value great Cortesius diuided amongst the Spanyshe souldyers reseruyng the fyfth parte therof and certayne fine feather woorkes the whiche he sent into Europe to be presented vnto Charles the fyfth kyng of Spayne and Emperour than in Germanie Who lysteth to see this hystorie more at large may reade Cortesius Nauigations and Frauncis Lopez woorke thereof written in the Spanyshe tongue made not long since Italian by Lucius Maurus and if I be not deceyued nowe a doyng into Englyshe An abridgement thereof I promysed or a commentary as Caesar termeth suche kynde of wrytynges to gyue other men occasion to
stryke of the head of an innocent Soo that he whiche coulde with moste agilitie make the head of one of those poore wretches to flee quyte and cleane from the bodye to the grounde at one strocke he was the best man and counted most honorable These thyngs and many suche other the one of them laid to the others charge before the king While these thinges were dooyng the Admirall sen● his brother the Leauetenaunt with an army of fourescore and tenne footemen and a fewe horsemen with three thousande of the Ilande men whiche were mortall enimyes to the Ciguauians to meete the people of Ciguaua with Kyng Guarionexius theyr graunde capitayne who had doone muche myscheefe to our men and suche as fauoured them Therefore when the Lieutenaunt had conducted his army to the bankes of a certeyne great ryuer runnyng by the playne whiche we sayde before to lye betwene the corners of the mountaynes of Ciguaua and the sea he founde two scoutes of his enimies lurkyng in certeyne bushes whereof the one castyng hym selfe headlong into the sea escaped and by the mouth of the ryuer swamme ouer to his companions the other being taken declared that in the woodde on the other syde the ryuer there lay in campe sixe thousande Ciguauians redy vnwares to assaile our men passing bye Wherefore the Lieutenaunt finding a shalow place where he might passe ouer he with his whole army entred into the ryuer the which thing when the Ciguauians had espyed they came runnyng out of the wooddes with a terrible crye and most horrible aspect much like vnto the people called Agathyrsi of whom the poet virgil speaketh For they were all paynted and spotted with sundry colours and especiall with blacke and red which they make of certeyne fruites nooryshed for the same purpose in theyr gardens with the iuyce wherof they paynt them selues from the forhead euen to the knees hauyng theyr heare whiche by art they make long and blacke if nature deny it them wreathed and rolled after a thousande fashions a man woulde thinke them to be deuylles incarnat newly broke out of hell they are so like vnto helhoundes As our men waded ouer the ryuer they sho●te at them and hurled dartes so thycke that it almost tooke the lyght of the sonne from our men insomuche that if they had not borne of the force thereof with theyr targettes the matter had gone wrong with them Yet at the length manye beyng wounded they passed ouer the ryuer which thyng when the enimies sawe they fledde whom our men pursuyng slue some in the chase but not manye by reason of theyr swyftnesse of foote Thus beyng in the wooddes they shotte at our men more safely for they beyng accustomed to the wooddes and naked without anye lette passed through the bushes and shrubbes as it had ben wylde bores or Hartes whereas our men were hyndered by reason of theyr apparell targets long iauelins ignoraunce of the place Wherfore when he had rested there al that nyght in vayne and the day folowyng he sawe no stirring in the wooddes he went by the counsel and conducte of the other Ilande men whiche were in his army immediatly frō thence to the mountaynes in the whiche kyng Maiobanexius had his cheefe mansion place in the village called Capronum by the which name also the kyngs palace was called beyng in the same village Thus marching forwarde with his armie about twelue myles of he encamped in the village of another kyng whiche the inhabitauntes had forsaken for feare of our men Yet makyng diligent searche they found two by whom they had knowledge that there was tenne kinges with Maiobanexius in his palace of Capronum with an armie of eight thousand Ciguauians At the Lieutenants fyrst approch he durst not geue them battayle vntyll he had somewhat better searched the region yet dyd he in the meane tyme skyrmyshe with them twyse The next nyght about mydnyght he sent foorth scoutes and with them guides of the Ilande men whiche knewe the countrey Whom the Ciguauians espying frō the mountaines prepared them selues to the battayle with a terrible crye or alarum after their maner but yet durst not come out of the woods supposing that the Lieuetenant with his mayne army had ben euen at hande The day folowyng when he brought his army to the place where they encamped leaping out of the wooddes they twyse attempted the fortune of warre fiercely assayling our men with a mayne force and wounding many before they coulde coouer them with theyr targettes Yet our men put them to flyght slue manye and tooke manye the resydue fledde to the wooddes where they kept them styll as in their most safe holde Of them whiche were taken he sent one and with him another of the Ilande men which was of his part to Maiobanexius with commaundement in this effect The Lieuetenaunt brought not hyther his army O Maiobanexius to kepe warre either against you or your people for he greatly desyreth your frendship but his intent is that Guarionexius who hath perswaded you to be his ayde against him to the great destruction of your people and vndoyng of your countrey may haue due correction aswell for his disobedience towarde hym as also for rays●ng tumultes among the people Wherefore he requireth you and exhorteth you to deliuer Guarionexius into his handes the whiche thing yf you shal perfourme the Admirall his brother wyll not only gladly admyt you to his freendshyp but also enlarge and defende your dominion And yf herein you refuse to accomplyshe his request it wyll folowe that you shal shortlye repente you thereof For your kyngdome shal be wasted with sworde and fyre and you shall abyde the fortune of warre whereof you haue had experience with fauour as you shall further know heareafter to your payne yf with stubbernesse you prouoke him to shewe the vttermoste of his power When the messenger had thus doone his arant Maiobanexius answered that Guarionexius was a good man indued with many vertues as all men knewe and therfore he thought him worthy his ayde especially in as much as he fled to him for succoure and that he had made him suche promise whom also he had proued to be his faithfull frend againe that they were noughty men violent and cruell desiring other mens goodes and such as spared not to shed innocentes blood in fine that he would not haue to doo with suche myscheuous men nor yet enter into frendshyppe with them When these thynges came to the Lieuetenauntes eare he commaunded the village to be burnt where he hym selfe encamped with manye other villages there about and when he drewe nere to the place where Maiobanexius lay he sent messengers to him agayne to common the matter with him and to wyll hym to send some one of his moste faythfull frendes to entreate with hym of peace Whereuppon the kyng sent vnto hym one of his cheefe gentelmen and with hym two other to wayte on
marueylyng at the oration of the naked young man for they had for interpreters those three men whiche had ben before a yeere and a halfe conuersaunt in the court of kyng Careta pondered in theyr mindes and earnestly consydered his sayinges so that his rashnesse in scatteryng the golde out of the ballaunces they turned to myrth and vrbanitie commendyng his dooyng and saying therin Then they asked hym frendly vpon what certaine knowledge he spake those thynges or what he thought best herein to be done yf they should bring a greater supply of men To this young Comogrus staying a whyle with him selfe as it were an Oratour preparing hym selfe to speake of some graue matter and disposing his body to a iesture meete to perswade spake thus in his mother tongue Geue eare vnto me O you Christians Albeit that the greedie hunger of golde hath not yet vexed vs naked men yet do we destroy one another by reason of ambition and desyre to rule Hereof spryngeth mortal hatred among vs and hereof commeth our destruction Our predecessours kept warres and so dyd Comogrus my father with princes beyng borderers about him In the whiche warres as we haue ouercome so haue we ben ouercome as doth appeare by the number of bondmen among vs which we toke by the ouerthrowe of our enimies of the whiche I haue geuen you fyftie Lykewyse at another tyme our aduersaries hauyng the vpper hande agaynst vs ledde awaye many of vs captiue for suche is the chaunce of warre Also among our familiers whereof a great number haue ben captiues with them beholde here is one whiche of long time led a payneful lyfe in bondage vnder the yoke of that kyng beyonde the mountaynes in whose kyngdome is such abundance of gold Of hym and suche other innumerable and lykewyse by the resort of free men on theyr side commyng to vs and agayne of our men resortyng to them by safe conduct these thynges haue ben euer as well knowen vnto vs as our owne possessions but that you may be the better assured hereof and be out of al suspection that you shall not be deceiued make me the guyde of this voyage byndyng me fast and keepyng me in safe custodie to be hanged on the next tree yf you fynde my sayinges in anye poynt vntrue Folowe my counsayle therefore and sende for a thousande Christian men apt for the warres by whose power we may with also the men of warre of Comogrus my father armed after our manner inuade the dominions of our enimies where both you may be satisfied with golde and we for our conductyng and aydyng you in this enterpryse shall thinke our selues abundantly rewarded in that you shal helpe to deliuer vs from the iniuries and perpetuall feare of our enimies After these woordes this prudent young Comogrus helde his peace and our men mooued with great hope and hunger of golde began agayne to swalowe downe theyr spyttle The fourth booke of the seconde Decade of the supposed continent AFter that they had taryed here a fewe dayes and baptised Comogrus with all his familie and named hym by the name of Charles after the kyng of Spayne they returned to theyr felowes in Dariena leauyng with hym the hope of the thousande souldiers whiche his sonne required to passe ouer those mountaynes towarde the South sea Thus entryng into the vyllage whiche they had chosen to inhabite they had knowledge that Valdiuia was returned within sixe monethes after his departure but with no great plentie of vyttualles because he brought but a smal shyppe yet with hope that shortly after there shoulde be sent them abundance of vyttualles and a newe supplye of men For young Colonus the Admiral and viceroy of Hispaniola and the other gouernours of the Ilande acknowledged that hytherto they had no respect to them of Dariena because they supposed that Ancisus the Lieuetenaunt had safely arryued there with his shyppe laden with vyttualles wylling them from hencefoorth to be of good cheare and that they shoulde lacke nothyng hereafter but that at this present tyme they had no bigger ship wherby they myght send them greater plentie of necessaries by Valdiuia The vyttuals therfore which he brought serued rather somwhat to mitigate theyr present necessitie then to satisfie theyr lacke Wherefore within a fewe dayes after Valdiuia his returne they fel agayne into lyke scarcenesse especially forasmuche as a great storme and tempest whiche came from the hygh mountaynes with horrible thunder and lyghtnyng in the moneth of Nouember brought with it suche a floodde that it partly caryed away and partly drowned al the corne and seedes which they had sowen in the moneth of September in a fruitefull grounde before they went to kyng Comogrus The seedes whiche they of Hispaniola call Maizium and they of Vraba call Hobba whereof they make theyr bread whiche also we sayde to be rype thryse euery yeere because those regions are not bytten with the sharpenesse of wynter by reason of theyr neerenesse to the Equinoctial lyne It is also agreeable to the principles of natural philosophie that this bread made of Maizius or Hobba shoulde be more wholsome for the inhabitauntes of those countreys then bread made of wheate by reason that it is of easier digestion for whereas colde is wantyng the natural heate is not dryuen from the outwarde partes into the inwarde partes and precordials whereby digestion is muche strengthened Beyng therefore thus frustrate of the increase of theyr seedes and the kynges neere about them spoyled of both vyttualles and golde they were enforced to seeke theyr meate further of and therwith to signyfie to the gouernours of Hispaniola with what great necessitie they were oppressed and what they had learned of Comogrus as concernyng the Regions towarde the South willyng them in consideration thereof to aduertise the kyng to send them a thousande souldiers by whose helpe they myght by force make waye through the mountaynes diuidyng the sea on both sydes if they coulde not bryng the same to passe quietly The same Valdiuia was also sent on this message carying with hym to the kynges treasurers hauing theyr office of receipt in Hispaniola three hundred poundes weyght of golde after eyght ounces to the pounde for the fyft portion due to the kynges excheker This pound of eight ounces the Spaniardes call Marcha whiche in weight amounteth to fyftye peeces of golde called Castellani but the Castilians call a pounde Pesum We conclude therefore that the summe hereof was .xv. thousand of those peeces of gold called Castellani And thus is it apparent by this accompt that they receiued of the barbarous kinges a thousande and fyue hundred poundes of eyght ounces to the pounde all the whiche they founde readye wrought in sundrye kyndes of ouches as cheynes braselets tablets and plates both to hang before theyr brestes and also at theyr eares and nosethryls Valdiuia therfore tooke shypping in the same Carauell in the which he came last and returned also before the
much difficultie discende into the shyp boate where without ores and without sayles they were caryed away by the violence of the water For as we haue sayd before in our Decades the seas doe runne there continually with a violent course toward the West They wandered thus .xiii. dayes not knowing whither they went nor yet fyndyng any thing to eate Famine consumed seuen of them which were cast into the sea to feede the fyshes The residue lykewyse in maner consumed by famyne and fallyng from one calamitie into an other were dryuen to Iucatana and fell into the handes of a cruell kyng who slue Valdiuia the gouernour with certayne of his felowes and when he had fyrst sacrifyced them to his Zemes shortly after hee ate them with his friendes of that conspiracie For they eate onely their enemies straungers doe otherwise absteyne from mans fleshe In this meane tyme while Hieronimus Aquillaris with syxe of his felowes were reserued to be sacrifyced the thyrde day they brake theyr bandes escaped the handes of that cruell Tyrant and fledde to an other kyng beyng his enimy who receyued them yet onely as bondmen It is a straunge thyng to heare of the moother of this Aquillaris For as soone as shee hearde that her sonne was fallen into the handes of the nations that eate mans fleshe shee fell madde incontinent so that whensoeuer after shee sawe any meate roastyng at the fyre or onely redy spytted to laye to the fyre shee ceassed not to crye out in this maner O mee most wretched moother beholde the members of my sonne But to returne to our purpose When Aquillaris had now receyued the gouernours letter sent by the Cozumellane messengers hee declared to the kyng his maister whose name was Taxmarus what was theyr errande thither and wherefore they were sent vsyng in the meane tyme many large discourses in expressyng the great power and magnificence of theyr kyng who had of late arryued in those coastes also of theyr humanitie and gentlenesse towarde theyr friendes and such as submitted them selues to them againe their rigour and fiercenesse agaynst suche as stubbernly eyther contemned them or denyed their requestes With these wordes he brought Taxmarus into such feare that the maister was now fayne to desyre his seruaunt so to handle the matter that they myght quietly enter into his dominion as his friendes and not as his enemies Aquillaris promised in their behalfe y t they should not onely come in peace but also to ayde him against his enemies if neede should so require Whervppon he dismissed Aquillaris with him three of his familiers and companions Thus they sayled togeather from Cozumella to Iucatana to the ryuer which they had founde before in the fyrst viage thither by the gouernance of Alaminus the pilot They founde the mouth of the ryuer stopped with sand as we reade of the ryuer of Nilus in Egypte when the wyndes called Etesti blow in summer and especially in the canicular dayes Therefore where as they could not enter into the ryuer with the biggest vesselles although it be otherwyse apte to receyue great shyppes the gouernour caused two hundred men to bee set alande with the Brigantines and shyppe boates wyllyng Aquillaris to offer peace to thinhabitauntes They demaunded what our men requyred Aquillaris aunsweared vittayles There was a longe space of sande by the syde of the towne whyther they wylled them to resort promysyng to bryng them vittayles thyther the day folowyng Our men went and they came accordyng to theyr promisse and brought with them eyght of theyr Hennes beyng as bygge as Peacockes of brownyshe coloure and not inferiour to Peacockes in pleasaunt tast They brought also as muche bread made of Maizium whiche is a grayne not muche vnlyke vnto panyke as woulde scarcely serue tenne hungry men and herewith desyred them to depart But when they perceyued that our men made no hast away immediately there came a great company of armed men towarde them demaundyng what they had to do thus to wander in other mens landes Our men made answeare by Aquillaris that they desyred peace vittayles and golde for exchange of other thynges They answeared againe that they woulde nother peace nor warre with them but threatned them to auoyde the land except they would be destroyed euery man Our men sayd that they woulde not depart without sufficient vittayles to mayntayne their souldyers They appoynted the day folowyng to bryng them more vittayles but they broke promise Yet perceyuing the seconde day that our men were encamped on the sande and had reposed there that nyght they brought them as much more vittayles and commaunded them in the name of theyr kyng to departe Our men sayde that they were desyrous to see the towne and to haue yet more store of vittayles The Barbarians denyed theyr request and therewith departed whisperyng and mutteryng among them selues In the meane tyme our men were styll so oppressed with hunger that they were enforced to seeke for meate The gouernour therefore sent his vnder captaynes to lande with a hundred and fyftie men As they went dispersed in dyuers companyes about the villages of the countrey the Barbarians met with one of theyr bandes and put them to great distresse But when theyr felowes being not farre from them hearde the noyse of theyr alarome they came with al possible haste to theyr rescue The gouernour on the other syde placing his ordinaunce in the brygantines shippe boates approched to the shorre with the resydue of his souldiers The Barbarians lykewyse beyng redy furnyshed to the battayle came runnyng to the sea syde to disturbe them that they shoulde not come alande and with theyr arrowes wounded many a farre of vnprepared The gouernoure discharged about .xx. peeces of ordinaunce agaynst them With the slaughter and terrible thunder wherof and with the flame of the fyre and smell of the brimstone they were so astonied and put to such feare that they fled and disparcled lyke wylde beastes whom our men pursuing entred into the towne which thinhabitantes forsoke in maner for feare of their owne men whō they sawe so dismaide On the banke of this ryuer there is a towne of such portentous biggnes as I dare not speake but Alanimus the pilot sayth that it contayneth in circuite fyue hundred myles and that it consisteth of .xxv. thousande houses Some make it somwhat lesse but they all agree that it is exceedyng great and notable The houses are diuided with gardens and are buylded of lyme and stone very artificiall and of cunnyng woorkemanship To theyr haules chambers parlers or other places of habitation they ascend by tenne or twelue stayres and haue certayne spaces betwene euery house so that it is not lawfull for any to lade his neyghbours wales with rafters or beames Theyr houses are separate one from an other by the space of three houses and are for the most parte couered with reede and thatche
auncient of the Greeke and Latine monumentes with the historyes of later tyme I perceyue it to bee a thyng whiche requireth no small iudgement of wytte and learnyng For we see in howe shorte tyme the names of thinges are chaunged as are also the maners of men I fynde therefore that those people whom at this day wee commonly call Moscouites were in tyme past as wynesseth Plinie called Roxolani whom neuerthelesse by chaungyng one letter Ptolome in his eyght table of Europe calleth Rosolanos as doeth also Strabo They were also many yeeres called Rutheni and are that people whiche sometyme fought manfully agaynst the Captaynes of Methridates as Strabo writeth They were called Moscouites of the chiefe citie of all the prouince named Moscouia or Mosca or as Volaterane sayeth of the ryuer Mosco They were sometyme gouerned by Duke Iohn whose wyfe was Helena of the lynage of Themperours of Constantinople of the noble famelie of the Palcologi Beyonde these Roxolanos Strabo sayeth there is no lande inhabited These Ruthenians therfore or Moscouites are people of the Northeast parte of the worlde from vs and are determined with the limittes of the great ryuer Boristhenes of Scithia on the one syde with the Lituanians and Polonians and on the other syde with the Tartars who ceasse not to vexe them with continuall warres and incursions Especially the great Emperour Cham of Cathay the chiefe Prince of the Tartars resydent by the sea syde in Taurico Chersoneso molesteth them with sore warres They are towarde the North syde inclosed with the frosen sea the lande of whose coastes beyng very large perteyneth in maner all to the dominion of the Duke of Moscouie The sea is it whiche the olde wryters call Lacus Cronicus so named of the Greeke woord Cronos which the Latines call Saturnus whom they fayne to be an olde man of complexion colde and slowe and thereby name all suche thinges as are colde and slowe Cronica as by lyke reason they dyd this North sea which beyng in maner euer frosen is slow and cold and in maner immoueable And for lyke consideration as sayth Plinie Heathens nameth it in the Scithian tongue Amaltheum which woord signifieth as much as congealed or frosen But that I wander not farre from my purpose Th empyre and dominion of the Duke of Moscouie reacheth so farre that it comprehendeth certayne partes of Asia and also of Europe The citie of Moscouia or Mosco is counted twyse as byg as Colonia Agrippina as they faythfully reporte which know both Unto this they haue also an other not vnequall in bygnesse called Fladimer Also Blescouia Nouogradia Smolne and Otifer all which theyr Ambassadours affyrme to be of princely and magnificall buyldynges and strongly defended with walles both of bricke and square stone Of these Blescouia is strongest and enuironed with three walles Other whiche they haue innumerable are not so famous as are these wherof this Duke of Moscouie and Emperoure of Russia taketh thinscription of his title For euen at this present when so euer eyther by his ambassadours or his letters he doth signifie hym selfe to be Emperour of Moscouie he is accustomed to vse this title Basilius by the grace of God Emperour of al Russia and great Duke of Fladamer Moscouie Nouigrade Blascouia Smolne and Otifer c. And this is the tytle whereby the sayde ambassadours saluted your maiestie in the name of great Basilius when they began theyr oration This prince of Moscouie hath vnder hym prynces of many prouinces and those of great power Of the whiche that olde whyte bearded man whom this Emperour of the Ruthians sent for his ambassadoure to Themperours maiestie into Spaine is not one of the least For euen he when necessitie of warre requireth is accustomed to make for his Emperour a bande of .xxx. thousand horsemen But this is to their singular commendation that they are so obedient to theyr prince in all thynges that beyng sommoned by hym by neuer so meane an heralde they obey incontinent as if it were to god thynkeing nothing more glorious then to die in y e quarel of theyr prince By reason of which obedience they are able in short tyme to assemble an army of two or three hundred thousande men against theyr enimies eyther the Tartares or the great Cham And haue hereby obtayned great victories and triumphes aswell agaynst the Turks as the Tartars by the exceeding multitude of theyr horsemen and continual experience in warres At such time as Themperour Maximilian made a league with them they kept warre against the kyng of Polonie They vse not onely bowes and dartes after the maner of the Parthians but haue also the vse of gunnes as we haue And to be briefe only the Moscouites may seeme that nation which hath not felte the commodities of peace Insomuch that if theyr region were not strongly defended by the nature of the place beyng impreignable it had or now been oftentymes conquered Theyr language agreeth muche with the tongue of y e Bohemians Croatians and Sclauons so that the Sclauon doth playnely vnderstande the Moscouite although the Moscouian tongue be a more rude and hard phrase of speach The historiographers wryte that the Sclauous tongue tooke the name of the confusion whiche was in Babell in the tyme of that stoute hunter Nemroth of whom mention is made in the Genesis But I can not enough marueyle at this thyng that whereas betweene Dalmatia nowe called Sclauonia and Moscouia both the Pannonies are situate yet this notwithstandyng the Hungarians tongue nothyng agreeth with the Moscouites Whereby we may coniecture that these nations were sometymes diuided by legions and that they came out of Dalmatia thyther whiche thyng also Volateranus affirmeth saying that the language of the Ruthenians whiche are the Moscouites is Semidalmatica that is halfe Sclauone Howe so euer it be this is certaine that the Bohemians Croatians Sclauons Moscouites agree in language as we perceiued by thinterpretours whiche your maiestie had then in your courte For whereas the sayd interpretours were borne among the Croatians Sclauons and none of them had euer been in Moscouia or before that tyme had any conuersation with them yet dyd they well vnderstande the ambassadours woordes There are in Mosuia wooddes of exceedyng byggenesse in the whiche blacke woolues and whyte beares are hunted The cause whereof may bee thextreme colde of the North whiche doth greatly alter the complextions of beastes and is the mother of whitenesse as the Philosophers affirme They haue also great plentie of Bees wherby they haue such abundaunce of hony and waxe that it is with them of smale price When the commoditie of theyr countrey is neglected by reason of long warres their chiefe aduauntage wherby they haue all thynges necessarie towarde theyr lyuyng is the gaynes whiche they haue by theyr ryche furres as Sables Marternes Luzernes
are furnyshed for a small pryce with all suche kyndes of meates as may bee desyred of suche as are gyuen to most excessiue gluttony Hennes and Duckes are bought for litle syluer pence the peece There is incredible plentie of beastes and cattayle both great and small The fleshe of beefe that is kylled in the myddest of wynter is so coniealed and frosen that it putrifieth not for the space of two monethes Theyr best and most delicate dyshes are gotten by huntyng and haukyng as with vs For they take all sortes of wylde beastes with Houndes and dyuers kyndes of nettes And with Faulcons and Erens or Eagles of a marueylous kynde which the region of Pecerra bryngeth foorth vnto them they take not onely Fesantes and wylde Duckes but also Cranes and wylde Swannes They take also a foule of darke colour about the bygnesse of a Goose with redde ouerbrowes whose fleshe in taste passeth the pleasauntnesse of Phesauntes These in the Moscouites tongue are called Tetrao whiche I suppose to be the same that Plinie calleth Erythratao knowen to the people of the Alpes and especially to the Rhetians which inhabite the landes about the sprynges of the ryuer Abdua The ryuer of Volga ministreth vnto them great fyshes and of pleasaunt taste especially Sturgions or rather a kynde of fyshe lyke vnto Sturgions which in the wynter season beyng inclosed in Ise are long reserued freshe and vncorrupte Of other kyndes of fyshes they take in maner an incredible multitude in the whyte lakes whereof we haue spoken before And whereas they vtterly lacke natyue wynes they vse such as are brought from other places And this only in certeyne feastes and holy mysteryes especially the pleasaunt Maluasies of the Ilande of Creta now called Candy are had in most honour and vsed eyther as medicines or for a shewe of excessiue aboundaunce forasmuch as it is in maner a miracle that wines brought from Candy by the streightes of Hercules pyllers and the Ilandes of Gades and tossed with such fluddes of the inclosed Ocean should be droonke among the Scythian snowes in theyr natiue puritie and pleasauntnesse The common people drinke meade made of hony hoppes sodden togeather whiche they keepe long in pitched barrelles where the goodnesse increaseth with age They vse also beere and ale as doe the Germanes and Polones They are accustomed for delicatenesse in sommer to coole theyr beere and meade with putting Ise therein which the noble men reserue in theyr sellars in great quantitie for the same purpose Some there are that delight greatly in the iuise that is pressed out of Cherries before they be full rype which they affyrme to haue the colour of cleare and ruddy wyne with a very pleasaunt taste Theyr wyues women are not with them in such honour as they are in other nations for they vse them in maner in the place of seruants The noble women gentelwomen do diligently obserue their walkes and haue an eye to their chastitie They are sildome bydden foorth to any feastes neyther are permitted to resorte to churches farre of or to walke abrode without some great consideration But the common sorte of women are easily and for a small price allured to lechery euen of straungers by reason whereof the Gentlemen doe litle or nothyng esteeme them Iohn the father of kyng Basilius dyed more then .xx. yeeres since He maryed Sophia the daughter of Thomas Paleologus who reigned far in Peloponnesus now called Morea was brother to Themperour of Constantinople She was then at Rome when Thomas her father was driuen out of Grecia by the Turks Of her were fiue children borne as Basilius him selfe George Demetrius Symeon and Andreas Basilius tooke to wife Salomonia the daughter of George Soborouius a man of singuler fidelitie wisedome and one of his counsayle the excellent vertues of whiche woman only barennesse obscured When the Princes of Moscouia deliberate to marry their custome is to haue choyse of all the vyrgins in the realme and to cause suche as are of most fayre and beautifull vysage and personage with maners and vertues accordyng to bee brought before them Whiche afterwarde they commyt to certayne faythfull men and graue matrones to be further viewed insomuche that they leaue no parte of them vnsearched Of these shee whom the Prince most lyketh is pronounced woorthie to bee his wyfe not without great and carefull expectation of theyr parentes lyuyng for that tyme betweene hope and feare The other virgins also whiche stoode in election and contended in beautie and integritie of maners are oftentymes the same day to gratifie the Prince marryed to his noble men Gentelmen and Captaynes wherby it sometymes commeth to passe that whyle the Princes contemne the lynage of royall descent suche as are borne of humble parentage are exalted to the degree of princely estate in lyke maner as the Emperours of the Turkes were accustomed to be chosen by comelynesse of personage and warly prowesse Basilius was vnder the age of fourtie and seuen yeeres of comly personage singular vertue princely qualities by all meanes studious for the prosperitie commodities of his subiectes furthermore in beneuolence liberalitie and good successe in his doinges to be preferred before his progenitours For when he had vi yeeres kepte warre with the Lyuons that moued .lxxii. confetherate cities to the cause of that warre he obteyned the victorie departed w t few conditions of peace rather giuen then accepted Also at the beginning of his reigne he put the Polones to flight and tooke prisoner Constantine the Captayne of the Ruthens whom he brought to Moscouia tyed in chaynes But shortly after at the ryuer of Boristhenes aboue the citie of Orsa he him selfe was ouercome in a great battayle by the same Constantine whom he had dismissed Yet so that the towne of Smolenzko which the Moscouites possessed before and was newe woon by the Polones should styll parteyne to the dominions of Basilius But agaynst the Tartars and especially the Tartars of Europe called the Precopites the Moscouites haue oftentymes kepte warre with good successe in reuenge of the iniuryes done to them by theyr incursions Basilius is accustomed to bryng to the fielde more then a hundred and fiftie thousande horsemen deuided into three bandes and folowyng the banners or ensignes of theyr Captaynes in order of battayle On the banner of the kynges wyng is figured the Image of Iosue the Captayne of the Hebrues at whose prayer the Sunne prolonged the day and stayed his course as witnesse the hystories of holy scripture Armies of footemen are in maner to no vse in those great wyldernesses aswell for theyr apparel being loose and long as also for the custome of theyr enemies who in their warres trust rather to the swyftnesse of their light horses then to trye the matter in a pyght fielde Theyr horses are of lesse then meane stature but
by the Emperour of Moscouia and the Sophi of Persia as hereafter shall appeare where we will wryte of the sayde priuileges Maister Ienkinson at his first commyng founde some difficultie to obtayne the Emperours licence to goe into Persia but at the length by friendshyp made hee gaue him both licence to goe and also gaue him letters commendatorie vnto the Sophie and committed also to him certayne affayres of his to doe there And after certayne banquettes and honourable enterteynment accompanied him with an Ambassadour of Persia who had been long in his Courte Therefore saylyng ouer the Caspian sea they arryued on the West syde thereof Not farre from thence is a towne named Darbent where is a very strong Castell of stone made by Alexander Magnus and a wall of the length of thirtiene dayes iourney whic●e he made when he kepte warres agaynst the Persians and Medians that the inhabitauntes of that countrey then newly conquered shoulde neyther lyghtly flee nor his enemyes inuade them This Darbent is now vnder the dominion of the Sophie and in the latitude of .41 degrees From Darbent to Bilbec or Bilbil the porte and harborowe where they discharge theyr goods is halfe a dayes saylyng And from thence to Sharuan is ten dayes iourney This towne standeth in a valley is in the countrey of Media in the whiche towne also remayneth the Soltan or gouernour of Media vnder the Sophie In the meane tyme the Kyng of Media named Abdalica cosen vnto the Sophie came thyther and honourably enterteyned maister Ienkinson and the Englyshe merchauntes which were with him and made them a great banquet causyng maister Ienkinson who was then rychely apparelled in silke veluet and scarlet as became an Ambassadour for the Queenes maiestie to sit downe somewhat farre from him The Kyng him selfe dyd sitte in a very ryche Pauilion wrought with silke and golde of the length of sixtiene fatham or thereabout placed on a hylles syde hauyng before him a goodly fountayne of fayre running water wherof he and his nobilitie dronke He was rychly apparelled with long garments of silke and cloth of golde brodered with pearle and pretious stones Uppon his head he had a Cappe with a sharpe ende of halfe a yarde long standyng vpryght of ryche cloth of golde wrapped about with a piece of Indian silke of twentie yardes long wrought with golde On the lefte syde of his Tollepan so is the cappe called was a plume of feathers set in a troonke of golde rychly inameled and set with precious stones At his eares he wore earerynges with pendantes of golde and stones a handful long with two great Rubies of great value in the endes therof All the grounde within his Pauilion was couered with Carpettes and vnder him selfe was spred a square Carpet wrought with siluer and golde and therevppon were layde two sutable Cussions Thus the kyng and his noble men satte in his Pauilion with theyr legges acrosse as doe Taylers Yet commaunded stooles to be gyuen to our men bycause they coulde not sitte so then caused meate to be sette before them and made them a banquet of a hundred dyshes of meate and as many of fruites and conserues After the banquet he caused them to goe with him a huntyng and hauking in the which they killed certayne beastes and Cranes Maister Ienkinson founde so much fauour with this kyng that at his departyng he commended him to the Sophie with his letters and also wrote in his fauour to his sonne being then in the Sophies courte So that after his commyng thyther by his meanes he came at the length to the presence and speache of the Sophie whiche otherwyse he should haue done very hardly by reason of the Turkes Ambassadours which then were there and resisted his affayres with many persuasions to the Sophie and other of his nobilitie agaynst the Christians as mortall enemies both to the Turkes and Persians and theyr religion And whereas a whyle before a perpetuall peace and amitie was concluded betweene the Turke and the Sophie the Ambassadours woulde persuade him that his friendshyp with the Christians or contracte with them touchyng any affaires and especially suche as myght be preiudiciall to the Turke or any of his subiectes myght engender newe suspitions and occasions of breache of the la●e concluded peace with many suche other surmised accusations Wherevppon the Sophie stayde and prolonged the tyme before he woulde admit maister Ienkinson to his speache At the length when by the friendshyp and fauour of Kyng Abdalaca and his sonne with other friendes made in the courte the tyme was appoynted that maister Ienkinson shoulde be hea●de there was one that came to him without the courte gate before he lyght from his horse on the ground and gaue him a payre of shooes sent from the Sophie suche as he him selfe was wonte to weare in the nyght when he ryseth to pray willyng him to put them on his feete for that it was not otherwyse lawfull for him beyng a Gawar or Caffer that is a mysbeleeuer to treade vppon that holy grounde When hee came to his presence he demaunded of him of what countrey of Frankes he was meanyng by Frankes Christians For they call all Christians Frankes that is Frenche men as we commonly call all Mahumetans Turkes although there bee many Mahumetans of other nations besyde Turkes He answered that he was a Christian of the best Frankes of the countrey of Englande declaryng further vnto him the cause of his commyng thyther to be for the great commoditie of him and his subiectes by the way of merchandies as myght further appeare by the letters directed vnto his maiestie from the Queene of Englande his Prince and the Emperour of Moscouia Muche more talke had he with maister Ienkinson not here to be written but by reason of the Turkes Ambassadours at this present was no great thyng done heerein to the preferment of the merchantes affayres Yet he commaunded that maister Ienkinson shoulde be honourably vsed and sent him certayne ryche apparell At this tyme was also in the Sophies courte the sonne of the Kyng of the Georgians a Christian Sismatike as they are nowe called The same tyme also a sonne of the Turkes who had before attempted somewhat agaynst his father and fledde to the Sophie was by him at the Turkes request deteyned in prison And vppon the late conclusion of peace the Turke required the Sophie to send him his head which hee graunted and sent it him by the sayd Ambassadours This voyage of maister Ienkinson was in the yeere .1561 Here foloweth such informations as was gyuen mee by maister Geferie Ducate principall Agent of the merchante● for the last voyage into Persia in the yeere of our Lord ▪ 1568. beginning in the dominion of the Sophie at the citie of Shamaki in Media bycause the beginning of the voyage from Moscouia hytherto is declared heere before SHamaki is the fayrest towne in all Media and the chiefest commoditie
about theyr neckes and therefore when they come to any citie they blowe theyr hornes all at once to make the inhabitantes afrayde as do they that with vs keepe Crowes or Rookes out of the corne Then commyng to talke with the citizens they demaund victuales and what soeuer other thynges they stande in neede of Whyle the kyng any tyme resteth a whyle in one place almost all the whole armye gardyng his person about his pauylion fyue or syxe hundred in the meane tyme raunge abroade togeather to geat what they can They tarry not past three dayes in one place but are euer wanderyng after the maner of the vagabunde Egyptians Arabians Tartars The region is not fruiteful but rough with craggie mountaines The houses of the citie are despicable the citie is also without walles This kyng is enemie to the Soltan of Machamir vexeth hym greatly with diuers incursions Of the citie of Ceull and the maner of the people Cap. 3. DEpartyng from Cambia in twelue dayes iorney I came to a citie named Ceull the land that lieth betweene them both is called Guzerat The kyng of this citie is an Idolatour they are of darke yealowe colour or Lion tawnye some were suche slender apparrell as they whom wee haue spoken of before other are naked coueryng onlye theyr pryuyties They are prompt to the warres and vse swordes bowes dartes slynges and rounde targettes They haue engines to beat downe walles to make great slaughter in an armie the citie hath walles and is distant from the sea but three myles A fayre ryuer runneth by the citie by the whiche much merchandies is brought thyther The soyle beareth almost all maner of fruites except Uynes Walnuttes and Chestnuttes It hath also Wheate Barlie and other kyndes of corne Here is made great plentie of Bombasyne cloth They are such Idolatours as are they of Calecut of whom we wyl speake hereafter yet are there in the citie many merchants Mahumetans They exercise iustice The kyng entertayneth but a small armie There are many horses and kyne Two dayes iorney from hence is a citie named Dabuly hauyng a great ryuer runnyng by it It hath walles after the maner of ours The soyle is fruiteful and the citie beautifull There are innumerable merchauntes Mahumetans The kyng is an Idolater and hath an armye of .xxx. thousande men They are in maners lyke vnto the other and of the same colour Of Goga an Ilande of India Cap. 4. DEpartyng from hence I came to the Iland of Goga not past a myle destant from the continent This payeth yeerely trybute to the kyng of Dechan a thousand peeces of golde of the value of the Saraphes of Babylon hauyng on the one syde the Image of the dyuell and on the other syde certayne vnknowen caractes Uppon the sea coaste of one syde of this Ilande is a towne buylded after the maners of ours The gouernour is a certayne Captayne of soldiers named Sauain he hath in his regiment foure hundred Mamalukes and is also a Mamaluke hym selfe and therefore when he fyndeth any whyte men he entertayneth them frendly and geueth them stypende of twentie Saraphes of golde euery moneth But he fyrst maketh profe of their strength and valiantnesse by wrestlyng and if they be not founde meete for the warres he putteth them to handy craftes This Captayne with onely his foure hundred Mamalukes greatly vexeth the kyng of Narsinga Departyng from hence in eyght dayes iorney by lande I came to the citie of Dechan Of Dechan a very fayre citie of India Cap. 5. THe kyng or Soltan of Dechan is a Mahumetan of whom the foresayde captayne Mamaluke is entred in wages This citie is beautifull in syght and the soyle very fruitefull and plentifull in maner of all thynges necessarie The kyng is accompted a Mamaluke and with hym .xxxv. thousande men of his dominion of horsemen and footemen The citie is beautified with a marueylous fayre pallace and the pallace adourned with many fayre roomes for before you come to the kynges chamber you must passe by .xliiii. other chambers for the sollers of the chambers are so orderly disposed that one chamber styll geueth entrye into an other vntyll you come to the last The citie is compassed with a wal after the maner of the Christians The houses are not vncomely The kyng vseth incredible pompe and regal magnificence They that wayte vppon his person weare vppon theyr shooes or starpins Rubies and Diamondes and such other precious stones What ouches and iewelles they weare in theyr earynges and Condalijs Carkenettes colours let wittie men iudge comparyng the feete to the more noble partes of the bodie Sixe miles from the citie is a mountayne where Diamondes are digged It is compassed with a wall and kept with a Garrison The region hath plentie of all thynges The people are Mahumetans Theyr apparel for the most part is of sylke or at the least the sherte or inmost vesture They weare also thyne buskynnes and hose lyke gregascos or maryners slops Theyr women after the maner of the women of Damasco haue theyr faces couered The kyng keepeth in maner continual war with y e king of Narsinga The most part of his souldiers are strangers enterteyned for wages They are white men but the inhabitantes of the coloure of the other Indians The kyng is marueylous ryche and liberall He hath also a great nauie of shyps He hateth the Christians as much as any other Thus hauyng traueled this part of the region I toke my iorney towarde a citie named Bathacala fyue dayes iorney from Dechan The inhabitantes are Idolaters except certayne Mahumetan merchaunts which resort thither for marchandise It hath abundaunce of Ryse Sugar Fygges Walnuttes Wheate Corne and many other fruites and rootes vnknowen to vs. They haues Beeues Kyne Bulfes Sheepe Goates and dyuers other beastes but no Horses Mules or Asses Of certayne other goodly cities of India Cap. 6. DEpartyng from hence I tooke my iorney towarde a citie named Centacola one dayes iorney from Bathacala The prince of this citie is no lord of great richesse There is neuerthelesse abundaunce of fleshe Ryse and other suche fruites as growe in India many Mahumetans resort hyther for merchaundies The kyng is an Idolater and of Lion tawny colour They go starke naked and weare nothyng on theyr heades This prince is subiecte to the kyng of Barthacal Departyng from hence two dayes iorney I came to an Ilande named Onor whose kyng is an Idolater and serueth the deuyll and is subiect to the kyng of Narsinga He is very gentle and familier he maynteyneth eyght foystes which make excursions and lyue by rouyng and pyracie He is in great frendshyppe with the kyng of Portugale The inhabitantes couer their priuities with a sindone and are besyde all naked The soyle beareth plentie of Ryse as in other partes of India There are in
beganne a sturre and mutinie in maner of a tumulte Whiche when the gouernour vnderstoode commaūded al his Captaines souldiers other officers to pla●● their artilerie order all thynges in redynesse least the 〈◊〉 sudden rage should attempte any thing agaynst the 〈…〉 al thynges were pacified in shorte tyme. Then 〈…〉 takyng me by the hande brought me into 〈…〉 and there demaunded of me what the kyng 〈…〉 of Calecut imagined or deuised to do 〈…〉 I infourmed hym of all thynges as 〈…〉 hauyng diligently searched to vnderstand all 〈…〉 When the gouernour was thus by me 〈…〉 secretes he appoynted a galley to bryng 〈…〉 who was then in the citie of Cusin The 〈…〉 the gallie was named Iohannes Seranus ▪ When 〈…〉 saw me he receiued me very fauourably I 〈…〉 also of al thynges Saying furthermore vnto hym 〈◊〉 myght by his fauoure obteyne pardon and assurance for 〈◊〉 sayde two Italians Peter Antonie and Iohn Maria which 〈…〉 made artillarie for the infidel princes I woulde procure that they shoulde returne to the Christians and do them ryght good seruice and that I was well assured that they dyd that by constraint Also y t they desyred none other thing then safe conduct and mony for theyr charges He was glad of this and graunted my request Whereuppon within three dayes after he sent me with letters to his sonne the gouernour in the citie of Canonor with commaundement to deliuer me as muche mony as shoulde suffice for the charges of the Christian exploratours or espions of the citie of Calecut I went therefore incontinent to Canonor where I agreed with one of the idolatours who for pouertie had gaged his wife children to cary letters to Calecut to Iohn Maria and Peter Antonie The content of which letters was that the Uiceroye had graunted them pardon and safe conducte and also mony for theyr charges Aduertisyng them to make none priuie of this thyng and especially to beware least it shoulde be knowen to theyr slaues or concubines For eche of them had a concubine a child a slaue Furthermore to leaue al their goods behynd them except thynges of great price as mony iewelles For they had a very fayre Diamond of the weyght of .xxxii. caractes esteemed to be woorth .xxxv. thousande crownes They had also a pearle of the weyght of .xxiiii. caractes Furthermore 〈◊〉 thousande rubies of the whiche some were of the weyght 〈…〉 and some of one and a halfe They had also .lxiiii. 〈…〉 garnyshed with many iewelles lykewyse in redye 〈…〉 and fyue hundred peeces of golde But see 〈…〉 much couetousnesse Whyle they thought to haue 〈…〉 all and theyr lyues therewith For not contentyng 〈…〉 with the aforesayde ryches they woulde needes also 〈…〉 notwithstandyng the aduertisement we had geuen 〈…〉 Gunnes three Munkeis two Muskecattes and two of 〈…〉 wherwith precious stones are polyshed All whiche 〈…〉 the onely cause of theyr death For whereas so many 〈…〉 not be secretly conueyed one of theyr slaues 〈…〉 〈…〉 of Calecut heereof who at the fyrst woulde scarsely 〈…〉 〈…〉 for the good opinion he had conceyued of them Yet sent foure 〈◊〉 his garde of them whiche are called Naery to 〈…〉 true But the slaue perceyuyng that the kyng woulde 〈◊〉 fauourably with them went to the hygh priest or Bishop of the fayth of the Mahumetans whom they call Cady and tolde hym all that before he had tolde the kyng of Calecut Addyng moreouer that the sayde Christians had disclosed theyr secretes to the Portugales When the Bishop vnderstode these thynges he called a counsayle of all the Mahumetan merchauntes wyllyng them of the common treasurie to geue a hundred peeces of golde to the kyng of Gioghi who was then at Calecut and to speake to hym in this maner It is not vnknowen to you most noble prince howe a fewe yeeres past when your maiestie came hither we receiued you with more honorable enterteinement then we are nowe able to do The cause whereof is no lacke of good wyl or knowledge of our deuetie towarde your hyghnesse but rather the great and manyfolde iniuries and oppressions whiche we haue susteyned and do dayely susteyne by our mortal enimies the Christians whereof we haue at this present example of two Christian traytors of this citie whiche haue disclosed to the Portugales al our secretes and therefore we make most humble petition vnto you to take of vs a hundred peeces of golde to commaund them to be slayne When the kyng of Gioghi hearde these woords he consented to theyr petition and forthwith appoynted two hundred men to commyt the murder And that they might be the lesse suspected of the Christians meanyng soddenly to kyll them in theyr house came by tenne and tenne as though they came to demaunde theyr accustomed rewarde But when the Christians sawe so great a company assembled about theyr house they suspected that they sought somewhat elles then theyr rewarde or offeryng and therefore incontinent takyng theyr weapons they fought so manfully at the wyndowes and doores of theyr house that they slue syxe men and woounded fourtie But at the length some of y e Gioghi shot at them certaine iron arrowes out of crosse bowes with the which they were both slayne the one beyng sore wounded in the head the other in the bodie As soone as they sawe them fall downe they cutte theyr throtes and takyng the hotte blood in the palmes of theyr handes drunke it vp with contumelious woordes agaynst the Christians After this murder the concubine of Iohn Maria came to Canonor with her young sonne whom I bought of her for eyght peeces of golde and causyng hym to be baptysed named hym Laurence because it was saint Laurence daye But within a yeere after he dyed of the frenche poxe whiche disease had then dispersed almost through all the worlde For I haue seene many infected with it foure hundred myles beyonde Calecut They call it Pua And they affyrme that this disease was neuer seene there past xvii yeeres before It is there more greeuous and outragious then with vs. Of the Nauie of the citie of Calecut and of the memorable conflicte betwene the Christians and Mahumetans In the whiche the Portugales with incredible valiantnesse gaue theyr enimies the ouerthrowe And howe the kyng of Canonor reioyced at their victorie Cap. 38. IN the yeere of our Lorde .1506 the fourth daye of March woorde was brought vs of the death of the sayde Christians The same daye from the cities of Calecut Pauan Capagot Pandaram Trompatam departed a great nauie of two hundred and eyght shippes of the whiche fourescore and foure were great shippes or shippes of burden and the rest were dryuen with Ores after the maner of Foystes whiche they call Parao The Nauie was manned with in maner innumerable Mahumetans shewyng themselues very braue in apparel of purple sylke and Bombasine with also theyr hygh and sharpe cappes after
Tamaius and .13 hundred men of that countrey to serue in steede of packe horses for cariage after the maner there began to set forwarde from his Castle Vera crux towardes Themistitan in Mexico distant from thence Westwarde a hundred leagues or thereabout Cempoal standeth from Vera Crux .4 leagues eche league in this countrey is .4 Italian miles Foure dayes iourney from Cempoal Cortesius was enterteined curtuously by the inhabiters of a goodly shyre named Sienchimalen as also by the citizens of Texuacan after that he had passed with his army an exceedyng hygh hyll thicke clad with yse snow euen in the moneth of August The like enterteynment was offered him his companie as hee marched forward vntill he came to the Tascaltecans lande who are so great enemies vnto the Mexicans that liuyng amyd their dominions they had rather want their greatest necessaries to wit salt and cotton to cloath them than become subiects in any wise to the Prince of Mexico With these Tascaltecans Cortesius had three conflictes passing through their countrey in the ende valiantly gaue them the ouerthrow Tascalteca is a greater citie more populous and better serued than Granata in Spayne was at what time the Moores yelded their bread is made of Maiz that is Indish corne a very good seat for hauking hunting freshe water fishing sea fish is scarse for it standeth from the sea aboue .50 leagues of pulse good store This towne wals houses in number 20000. built of stone high strong in respect of the enemy euer at hand they keepe markets and fayres The people doth weare hose and maketh good accompt of Iewels precious stones of crestes bushes of feathers to set them foorth in the warres they garnishe euery thing with gold wood is brought to be sold to the market on mens shoulders timber boordes bricke lime stone are vsuall merchandise Theyr Carpenters Masons Potters are very skilfull There is no vessell wrought amongst vs more artificially than theyrs is Medicinable hearbes are solde openly They vse baths the nation politike gouerned in maner of a common wealth The whole circuit of this prouince is .90 leagues full of townes boroughes and villages hils and dales most ●ruitfull well stored of good souldyers in respecte of their enemyes rounde about them About one league of this citie encamped Cortesius by his spials vnderstanding the citizens not to mistrust or feare any inuasion tooke the strongest part therof by night in the morning came the best citizens to offer him all obedience Cortesius than returning with the victorie victuals to his campe found it in a troublesome mutinie for the great distresses present calamies they thought them selues to be in so far of from their owne country in the midst of their enemies This mutinie appeased he with good woords comfortable reasons persuading them their enemies to be weaker the spreadyng abroade of the gospell to be now in their hands them selues to be Spaniardes who esteeme not death to wyn glory a most happy death that to be where life is spent in the conquest of infidelles and barbares to lye by the sea side idlely that were to no purpose Thus appeased he the rebellious myndes of his companyons and after .20 dayes abode made in this prouince he led them into an other shire for pastures and riuers the most commodious for habitation best in all that countrey The principall citie hath name Churultecal as great as faire as Tascalteca and so gouerned vntil the king of Mexico oppressed it Here was Cortesius receyued with songes musicall instruments and trumpets by the priestes and children of the citie after their maner wel feasted The end of all this mirth was an vprore of the inhabiters agaynst him procured by the kyng of Mexico as it was supposed whereof Cortesius hauing secrete intelligence by a woman of Cempoal that folowed his Campe summoned a parle with the beste citizens of Churultecal at his owne lodging Those citizens first laid he fast by the heles than speedely with his army warned to be in a readinesse for that purpose set vpon the deceiptful Barbares of a soden before that they were throughly prouided and gaue them the ouerthrow The prince of Mexico acquitted him selfe of this vprore protesting by his Ambassadors to Cortesius that his disloyall subiectes the Churultecals had bruted that conspiracie vnder his name to doe him iniury whom they would not willingly obeye He sent withall rich presentes praying Cortesius to come to Themistitan promising him that he should want nothyng there notwithstandyng the harde prouision thereof in so barren a place altogeather in the water To conducte Cortesius thyther he sent also certayne Gentlemen for guydes and other of his nobilitie to receyue him as he came neare To speake of euery curtesie shewed him in this iourney and to wryte of euery place he passed and particulerly to rehearse euery dayes iourney euery hyll towne ryuer house and gardeyne by the way would breede ouermuche tediousnesse In fewe the Lordes of the countrey as he went vsed him well especially in Guazucingo prouince and Chialcho shyre the one whereof was violently oppressed by the prince of Mexico the other willingly subiect vnto him In the cold mountaynes he wanted no wood in the townes hee was prouided for and his companions who were of Cempoallens Tastaltecans Churultecans G●zucinges in number .4000 of Spaniards not aboue .300 In this maner Cortesius accompanyed folowed came at the length into a vale bearing name Colua ▪ wherein be two meres the one salt water of .60 leagues in circuit the other a freshet Partly on the land partly in the salt meere standeth Iztapalapa a fayre towne from whence to Themistitan the royall seat of Mexico there lyeth a way on a stone wall two speares length broad built vp in the water by hand with infinite charges the wall serueth also for a bridge by this bridge sides stand three fayre townes Mesicalcingo Coluacan VVichilabusco The first is supposed to haue .3000 houses the second .6000 the third .4000 wel built especially their Towers their Temples wherin they doe sacrifice In these townes great aboundaunce of salt is made that serueth all such as doe acknowledge the Prince of Mexico for their Lord. Other be denied it as of the Tascaltecans it was sayde This salte meere rysing doeth flowe into the Freshet as it ebbeth the Freshet falleth into the salt meere agayne The freshe water may serue neuerthelesse for drinke the salte water becommeth not freshe therewithall The wall hath many draught bridges for warfare and sluses for passage where toll is payde vnto the kyng Halfe one league before you come to Themistitan where the lyke bridge or causey from the lande ioyneth with the aforesayde wal standeth a strong Castle double walled about with two strong Towers not possible to be conquered To this place came a thousande Gentlemen Courtiers foorth of the citie
A man would thynke they were all dombe in the presence of the kyng suche is theyr silence No man dare turne his backe to the kyng but departyng from hym eche one goeth backewarde No man dare go out of his place when the kyng passeth by At his goyng abrode he is folowed with a great troupe of his nobles and gentelmen and hath three rods borne before hym one whereof he taketh in his owne hand when he commeth foorth out of his lytter wherin commonly he is caryed abrode In conclusion no heathen prince hath so many cerimonies as this kyng of Mexico Quietly in this citie from the .8 of September the yeere of our lorde .1520 vntyll Maie folowing remayned Cortesius with al honour enioying his pictorye and rulyng so myghty a kyngdome conquered by hym with al prosperitie When Velasque a Spanyarde then Lieuetenaunt of Cuba that euer enuied at his good hap sent Naruaez a lusty young captayne with eyghtene sayle wel appointed to commaund Cortesius out of Mexico and to geue ouer the rule of that countrey which he him selfe had paynefully conquered vnto their pleasure by forged patents from the Spanyshe kyng Muche amazed at the fyrst was Cortesius with this tydinges consideryng that if he went agaynst Naruaez the Mexicanes not yet throughly brought in subiection might in the meane time reuolte againe if he staied Naruaez might put his conquest in ioperdy violently forcing y e countrey euerywhere as he came The matter was thorowly knowen to the barbares of Themistitan The king himselfe had brought hym by his vassalles paynted in a table the ships theyr number artillarye horsemen and footemen landed In the ende Cortesius resolued hym selfe to go agaynst Naruaez Wherfore leauyng at Themistitan a Garryson of Spaniardes the whiche he hyghly commended vnto Muteezuma marched forward with .170 footemen sendyng other .80 that way before hym Naruaez lykewyse came on agaynst Cortesius and had nowe taken Cempoal and styrred vp agaynst hym those citizens Cortesius hauyng intelligence of Naruaez certayne beyng there in an hygh towre garded with .800 souldiers and .19 Canons set at the steyre foote thynkyng neuerthelesse nothyng at all of his commyng set vppon Naruaez with .250 men and there tooke hym on Witsunday night the rest of his company yelded them selues In the meane while the citizens of Themistitan reuolted against theyr prince and the Spanyshe gouernement as by a messenger dispatched thither from Cempoal to declare Cortesius good hap and Naruaes imprisoment it was vnderstoode The castle of Themistitan besieged in many places set a fyre and vndermyned the Spanyshe Gartyson to be in great ieopardye the flye boates they made burnt the messenger him selfe greeuously wounded Muteezuma the kyng onely to fauoure them and hym nowe scarsely obeyed the nobles to choose death rather then to obey suche geastes that keepe theyr kyng lyke a warde that dispossesse them of their owne citie that meyntayne therin theyr enimies the Tascaltecans Guazuingoes euen before theyr face at theyr owne charges to despight them that deuoure theyr vittaylles harde to come by in that citie so situated in the water that iniurie them that lay on tributes that by hooke a●d by crooke make away from them whatsoeuer good there is to ●e had that breake downe theyr Idolles and suppresse theyr auncient rytes and cerimonies Cortesius therefore speedily with .70 horses and fyue hundred footemen and as muche artillery as he could returneth againe to Themistitan whyther he came about mydsommer daye At Cortesius entrie into the citie agayne the Spanyardes throughly beaten by the Barbares with dartes and stones from hygh pine-apple trees an hygh tower that was neere began to take hart and to hope for good happe after theyr great troubles The Barbares lykewyse vnderstandyng of Cortesius commyng grew to be more cruel and fyrce ▪ with horrible cryes shootyng of theyr arrowes and throwyng an infinite number of dartes and stones for the company of them was innumerable that the ayre seemed darke and cloudie therewith Cortesius sent out a captaine with two hundred to rescue the Spanyardes in the palace This captayne slue many of the Barbares but the multitude was so great that he dyd litle good Foure of his souldyers were slayne he hym selfe greeuousely wounded had much a do to retyre agayne Cortesius set vppon them at an other syde litle harme dyd he them likewyse for that as sone as the Barbares had spent theyr dartes and stones eche one gat vp into the turrette of his house to saue hym selfe The fyght helde on fyrcely a good while Cortesius was forced in the ende to retyre with some daunger and losse of many of his soldiers The whiche thyng when the Barbares had espied they begane to geue a newe assalte on euery syde of the palace to fyre the gates and stoutely to continue batterye fyghtyng euen vppon theyr felowes dead carcasses and wyshyng with them rather to be slayne then to lyue in bondage vnder the Spanyardes Thus spent they in armes the whole daye yeeldyng a newe supply of men the multitude was so great foure tymes an houre and raysyng clamors all the nyght long to the Spanyardes great annoy that then coulde take no rest after theyr paynefull and daungerous conflycte the daye tyme fewe in number fyghtyng from mornyng to nyght without intermission and .80 of theyr companye wounded The next day the Barbares set vppon the Spanyardes agayne Cortesius planteth .xiii. feelde peeces and furnysheth his vangarde with harquebuziers and archers but theyr enimies so litle esteemed death that seyng at one shoot a dozen of theyr felowes torne in peeces all feare set a syde they supplyed styll the voyde places The day folowyng the Spanyardes wanting victuals issued out in open feelde they slue many Barbares they ouerthrew the houses neare y e pallace they tooke certaine draught bridges but at night they returned with their Generall and 50. of their company wounded as hungry as they went foorth Wherefore they caused warlike engines to be made of boords in fourme of a fouresquare house going on wheeles placing in ech one therof .20 shot whom many rascall souldiers folowed with pikeaxes and hatchets to do harme that way in destroying their buildings but stones dartes came so mightily so thicke about the Spaniardes eares that such as went thus foorth were faine to creepe home againe out of their engines torne in peeces they that taried at home could not once looke out but they were domaged Kyng Muteezuma desirous to dissuade his citizens from the assalt shewyng him selfe vnto them out of the Pallace had a blowe with a stone whereof in three dayes he dyed This Prince was of a very good nature wyse and very patient his body the Spaniardes lefte vnto the Mexicans to bury for that they them selues had little other leasure then to thinke how to saue their liues rather than to bury the dead The next day the nobles of the countrey came to a parle with Cortesius