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A01864 The historie of the great and mightie kingdome of China, and the situation thereof togither with the great riches, huge citties, politike gouernement, and rare inuentions in the same. Translated out of Spanish by R. Parke.; Historia de las cosas mas notables de la China. English González de Mendoza, Juan, 1545-1618.; Parke, Robert, fl. 1588.; Loyola, Martín Ignacio de, d. 1606. 1588 (1588) STC 12003; ESTC S103230 345,359 419

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such as are poore widowes and driuen by necessitie cannot sustaine themselues they may for the supplying of their want sell their children and binde them to perpetuall seruitude the which is permitted in such sort that there are amongst them rich merchants that deale in no other thing and all the maiden children that they buy so bee brought vp with great care and taught to plaie and sing and other things appertaining vnto pleasure Then after when they are of yeares they carrie ●hem vnto the houses aforesaid ordained for common women The first day that they doo dedicate her to this ill office before shée is put into this common house they carrie her before a iudge which the king hath ordained for euerie house appertaining to any cittie or towne appointed to bée their kéeper and sée that there bee no euill rule kept amongst them and this iudge dooth place her in the house himselfe and from that day forwards her master hath no more to doo with her but to go euerie moneth vnto the iudge to recouer his tribute which is a certaine summe set downe by the iudge by agréement made betwene them both he appointeth besides this the time when hée shall be paide for her and for that was spent in her bringing vp and teaching These women be very much haunted and passe away the time maruellous pleasantly by reason of their singing and playing which they doo with great cunning and according vnto the report of the Chinos they apparell themselues with great curiositie and paint themselues They haue amongst them many blinde women that are frée and not bonde these are trimmed dressed and painted by others that haue their sight and such as haue spent all their youth in these houses can not goe foorth so long as they liue as is commaunded by a lawe publike least by their dishonest demeanure they should be an occasion of some harme and an euill example to others Whatsoeuer pro●ite dooth remaine vnto these women when they haue payed their maister they giue vnto the Iudge their superiour who doth keepe it faithfully and carefully and giueth a good account thereof euerie yeare vnto the Uisitors And afterwardes when these women waxe olde it is repa●ed vnto them againe by order of the said Iudge But it is bestowed in such sort that they shall not lacke neither haue vrgent necessitie But if it so fall out that they should lacke they will giue them a stipend to maintaine them onely for to dresse and trimme the blinde women or else they will put them into the kinges hospitall a place ordeyned for such as can not helpe themselues The men children which they buy and are solde to supplie their necessitie in the order aforesaide of the women they put to learne some occupation and after that they are expert therein they doo serue a master in the same trade for a certaine time the which being expired their masters are not only bound to giue them their libertie but also to prouide them of wiues and to marrie them prouiding also for them houses and necessaries wherewith they may get their liuing Which if they doo not of their owne frée will they are compelled by Iustice to doo whether they will or no. And they for a token of gratefulnesse must come vnto their masters the first day of the yeare and other dayes appointed and bring him some present The children of these be all frée and subiect to no bondage for the benefite ●oone vnto their father for their bringing vp CHAP. XXI The fashion of their ships aswell of those that passe the seas as of those that doo roade riuers which are manie and great and howe they doo prouide themselues of fish for all the yeare THere is in this kingdome a great number of shippes and barkes with the which they sayle all a long their coastes and vnto Ilandes neere hande and into their riuers the which doo runne cleane through the most part of all their prouinces and there dwelleth so much people vpon these riuers in shippes and barkes that it séemeth to be some great Citie there is so many of thē that they do esteeme that there is almost as many people that dwell vpon the water as vpon the lande They make them slightly and with small cost for they haue in all partes of this countrie great aboundance of tymber iron and other thinges necessarie for this vse but in especiall a kinde of glew wherewith they doo ●awbe and trimme their shippes that is much more tougher and stronger then the pitch which wee vse which after it is layde on sticketh fast and maketh their shipping as harde as stones the aboundance whereof and the great number of shipwrightes and againe for that there is not on the lande roome enough for the people to inhabite being so many in number causeth them to build so great a number of shippes and barkes They vse their shippes and barkes of many fashions euery one hath his proper name Such ships as they haue to saile long voiages be called Iuncos but for the warre they make huge mightie vessels with high castles both on the prowe and sterne much after the fashion of them that come out of the Easterne seas and vnto those with which the Portingales sayle into the east India They haue these in so great number y t a generall may ioine together in 4. dayes an armie of more than 600. Those which they do commonly vse for burden and to lade are made much after y e same fashion greatnes and smal difference there is betwéene them but that they are lower both before at the sterne There is an other sort of lesser vessels are much like vnto p●nases haue foure great ores on ech side whereat row sixe men at euery ore foure at the least These are excellent good to rowe in and out ouer their hard hauens or into any place where is litle water they do call thē Bancoens There is an other sort that is more brode than these which they call Lanteas carie eight ores on a side with sixe men at euerie ore Of these two last sorts of vessels pirates rouers at the sea do cōmonly vse for in those seas there be very many for that they be very nimble to fly to giue assalt as occasion doth serue They haue an other sort of vessels y t are long like vnto a galley but more square being very brode néede little water they do vse thē likewise to transport merchandise frō one place to an other they are swift run vp the riuers with smal force of the armes Many other sorts of barks they haue besides the aforesaid some with galleries windows painted and gylt but chiefely those which the Uiceroyes and Gouernours doo make for their recreation Of those sortes of shipping afore sayd which they call Iuncos the king hath in al his prouinces great armies and in them souldiers with their Captaines to defend
the kingdom they should neuer haue séene them for they haue great care that any other nations should know their secrets their manner of gouern●ment and liuing CHAP. XVII Here it doth intreat of the mightinesse goodnesse riches and fortitude of the kingdome of China THis kingdome is vnder the tropike of Capricorne and stretched foorth on the sea coast south west and northeast more than fiue hundreth leagues it hath on the partes south west the kingdome of Cochinchina and on the north east it dooth confine on Tartaria a kingdome which dooth compasse the most part of the lande on the other part to the northwest there is an other mightie kingdome of white people which is beyonde the kingdome of Persia it is called Catay there be in it Christians and the king thereof is called Manuell It is sayd of a truth that from the furthest part of this kingdome vnto Ierusalem is sixe moneths trauaile by lande the which they vnderstoode by certaine Indians which came from that kingdome by Persia whose testimonials were made in Ierusalem sixe moneths before wherein was declared how that they had trauelled by Arabia felix and passed the red sea The other fourth part of this kingdome is compassed with a verie asper and high mountaine which is fiue hundreth leagues vpon a right line but nature had left certaine places open towards the northwest which might be fourscore leagues little more or lesse towards the sea of Iapon which is towards the Septentrion The great riches of this countrie and the great number of people that be therein did supplie the same as in the first part of this historie is more at large declared And for that the king of this countrie séeing himselfe oppressed and troubled by the mightie Tartaro seemed that easily he might defende himselfe from him in shutting vp of those gates which nature had left open betwixt the mountaines he did shut it vp with the death of many thousande of people for that hee vsed therein great tyrannie which afterwardes was the occasion of his owne death This mountaine with the supply by man is the famous wall of the kingdom of China that is of fiue hundred leagues long yet you must vnderstande it in the manner aforesaide the better to giue credite thereunto for alonely f●ure score leagues were made by mans handes with great industrie and there is vpon it an infinite number of bulwarkes which maketh it the more fayrer and stronger But yet not so strong as is the other four hundreth and twentie leagues which were made by nature Nigh vnto the same there is a great desert full of ditches and lakes of water which is the occasion that this kingdome hath béene conserued for more than two thousand yeares as doth appeare by their owne histories which they holde to bee verie true All is imparted into fiftéene prouinces with that of Aynao and euerie one of them hath a principall Citie of the which it beareth the name In the middest of this kingdome there is a great lake out of the which proceedeth many great and mightie riuers which runne through all the kingdome and are so big that there sayleth vp and downe in them barkes sregats brigandines and many other vessels of an other kinde of making This great abundance of water is the occasion that it is so sertile and so well prouided of all thinges and againe the most part of their cities and townes are situated on the riuers side so that by them the one prouince doth communicate with an other carrying the one vnto the other great store of marchandice and other thinges of great curiositie and is done with little cost for that all things are done very good cheape This sea cost of this kingdome is the biggest and the best that is knowen in all the world there is vpō it fiue prouinces which be these of Canton Chincheo Liampon Nanquin and that of Paquian which is the furthest towardes the northwest in the which is resident the king and his counsel with all his court ordinarily and the most part of the men of warre that it hath for that this prouince doth confine vpon the Tartaros their enimies Some will say that the kings ordinarie dwelling there is for that it is the best and most fertilest of all the kingdome But I beleeue according to the saying of some of the Chinos that he doth it not but because it is so nigh vnto Tartaria and to finde himselfe there whereas hee may supply all necessities which might happen vpon a soddaine by his enimies In these riuers there are certaine Ilandes the which are very profitable vnto all the kingdome for that there is nourished brought vp in them great store of deare hogges and other beasts which is the occasion that the cities are so well prouided and serued But one of the things which causeth most admiration to thē that go to this kingdome is to see so infinite a number of ships and barkes that be in euerie port thereof and are so many that there hath béene a man in the citie of Machao that hath layde a wager that alonely in the riuer of Canton there be more ships and vessels than in all the cost of Spaine One thing I may affirme that I haue heard declared by persons of great credite that haue béene in that kingdome but in especiall of the father Ignacio whom I do follow in this Itinerario that it is an easie thing in any one of these fiue prouinces that be vpon the sea cost to ioyne together a thousande ships of warre and all of them as they say in Spaine dedicated for that purpose The occasion why there be so many is alreadie declared in his proper chapter There are diuers opinions touching the greatnesse of this kingdome but the most are conformable with the father fryer Martin de Herrada who like a good Geomatrician and Mathematician went nighest the pricke This opinion is declared in the first part of this historie whereunto I referre me and in that which toucheth in particular things of that kingdom for that it is there declared at large as it was taken out of their bookes But one thing I cannot let passe but declare for that it séemeth woorthie to make thereof a particular memorie and I vnderstood it by the mouth of the said father Ignacio which is that he doth affirme it to bee certaine true approued that euery day in the yeare one with an other besides wars and the plague the which in this countrio they remember not to haue any neither do they find written in their histories for 2000. yeares neither by famin nor any other accidentall occasions to consume the people yet doth there die many thousands of people both smal great in al the fiftéen prouinces of this kingdome which is no small griefe vnto thē who with a christian zeale doth consider this heauie tribute of so many soules that the diuell doth recouer eueri●
the coastes that as well all ships of their owne Countrie as those that doo come from other places to traficke with them may goe and come in safetie and not bee spoyled and robbed of the roauers that be there abouts In the riuers there are pynases well equipped appointed for the same purpose And the king doth out of his rentes pay all these ordinarie souldiers and that with great liberalitie The pitch wherewith they doo trimme their shippes as we haue sayde is founde in that kingdome in great aboundance it is called in their language Iapez and is made of lyme oyle of fish and a paste which they call Vname it is verie strong and suffereth no wormes which is the occasion that one of their shippes dooth twise out last one of ours yet dooth it hinder much their sayling The pumpes which they haue in their shippes are much differing from ours and are farre better they make them of many péeces with a whéele to draw water which whéele is set along the shippes sides within wherewith they do easily clense their shippes for that one man alone going in the wheele doth in a quarter of an houre cleanse a great shippe although she leake verie much Many men be borne and brought vp in these shippes and barkes as is aforesayde and neuer in all their liues haue béene on lande and doo knowe none other occupation wherewith to liue but that which they doo inherite of their fathers which is to goe in one of these shippes or barkes carrying and recarrying of merchandise from place to place or to ferrie people ouer the riuers They haue in them their wiues their children and haue like neighborhood amongst thē on the riuers as in their cities and townes of whom they stand in little néed for they do bring vp within their ships all things necessarie for their sustenance as hens duckes pigeons and other foules good to be eaten and if they do lacke any thing they haue it in victualing houses shops which they haue amongst thē on the same riuers in great abundance and of other superfluous thinges such as may bee founde in a citie they are well furnished as of many sorts of silkes amber and muske and other things more curious then needefull They haue also in their shippes pots with little orange trées and other fruits and gardins with flowers and other herbes for their recreation and in the wide shippes pooles of water wherein they haue great store of fish aliue and yet doo dayly fishe for more with nettes This kingdome is the best prouided of fish of any that is knowen by reason of the great number of these barkes as also because they haue many fisher men at Sea and in the riuers that continually fish with nettes and other engines for the same purpose and doo carrie the same fishe in infinite number aliue into their pooles fiue hundreth leagues vp into the lande by the riuers which they doo with great ease in shifting the water euerie day and doo féede them with thinges fit for the nature of the fish The chiefe and principallest time of fishing in this countrie is in three moneths of the yeare which is Februarie March and Aprill at such time as are the spring tides which do bring the fish out of the mayne sea into the riuers and there they do spawne and leaue their young then these fisher men who doo liue by that facultie doo take them and put them into their pondes and féede and nourish them in the ships till they come to bignesse to be solde Unto these fishermen repayre many barkes from diuerse partes of the Countrie to buye their fishe and doo bringe with them wicker baskets lyned with a certaine thicke paper for that purpose and annoynted with oyle so that the water can not goe out wherein they doo put their fish and do shift them euerie day and feede them as aforesaide All people doo buye of this fish although they bee verie small and leane and doo put them in their pondes which euerie one hath in his house as common vse in all that countrie is whereas in a small time they waxe great fitte to be eaten They doo féede them with a paste made of cowes doung buffes doung and pigins doong Likewise they doo throwe of these small fishes into the mo●tes of their Cities which is the occasion that they are so full of fish But all that bréede in them do appertaine vnto the Gouernors or Iudges of the cities so that none without their expresse commandement dare fish for them These Gouernors and Iudges doo vse much to recreate themselues vppon the riuers and haue for the same purpose barkes made close chambers in them verie curiously wrought with windowes and galleries likewise hanged with rich clothes and many other thinges for their contentment and pleasure CHAP. XXII A curious order that these Chinos haue to bring vp ducks in great abundance and with small cost and of a pleasant and ingenious order of fishing which they vse THe great number of people that is in this countrie and not permitting any idle people to liue therein is the occasion that it doth stirre vp the wits of poore men being constrained thereunto by necessitie the inuenter of manye thinges to séeke new inuentions to get their liuing to relieue and supply their necessities So that many of this kingdome séeing the whole countrie so throughly inhabited tilled that there is not one foote without an owner they do take them vnto the riuers which are verie great and there they do make their dwellinges in ships and barkes as is aforesaide where they haue their whole families vnder borde to defende them from the sunne and rayne and inclinations of the heauens There they do vse the occupation that they do knowe or that which they did inherite of their father and many misteries to liue by verie strange whereof the most principall is to bring vp in some of their barkes so great quantitie of duckes that they sustaine a great part of the countrey therewith and the vse thereof is as followeth They haue cages made of canes so bigge as the vpper most holde of the barke in the which may be foure thousand duckes at once They haue in certaine places of these cages made nestes where these duckes do almost euerie day laye egges the which they take and if it be in the sommer they doo put them in buffes doong or in the doong of those duckes which is verie warme where they leaue them so many dayes as experience hath taught them that they will come foorth Then they doo take them out of the doong and do breake them one by one and take a little ducklin the which they do with so great cunning that almost none of thē doth perish which is y t which causeth great admiration vnto some that go to sée it although they bée but few for that it is an auncient custome vsed of long time in that countrie
And for to haue the fruition of this benefite all the yeare in the winter they must vse an artificiall helpe to giue a little warmenes vnto the doong for the bringing forth of their egs they do vse thē an other inuentiō as ingenious as the first that is this they take a great number of canes tied one by another whereon they do laye the doong then vppon that they doo lay their egges and do couer them verie well with the same this being done they put vnder the canes straw or some other like thing and set it on fire but in such sort that it dooth not burne but kéepeth a naturall heat all the time till they thinke that they are readie to be taken out Then doo they take and breake them as aforesaide so that their pultrie dooth increase in such number as though they were antes Then doo they put thē into an other cage for the same purpose wheras be old duckes brought vp for no other purpose but to couer the little ones vnder their winges and kéepe them warme and there they doo féede them euery day till such time as they can féede themselues and go abroad into the fieldes to profit themselues in the companie of the olde duckes Many times they haue in number aboue twentie thousand yet do they maintain them with a small-cost and it is in this order euerie morning they do giue them a small quantitie of boyled rice then do they open a doore of the cage which is towardes the riuer and doo put a bridge of canes that doth reach vnto the water then doo they come foorth with so great haste one vpon an other that it is a pastime to sée them All the day after they do passe the time vpon the water and in the fieldes of rice vpon the land wheras they do féede the owners of the rice doo giue vnto the owners of the duckes somewhat to let their duckes go into their fields for that they do destroy all the grasse and other wéeds in it And hurt nothing of the rice When that the euening draweth on then they of the barke do make a sound with a taber or such like y t which being heard of his duckes they throwe thēselues with great spéede into the water and swimme straight vnto their owne barke whereas their bridge is readie put for them and euerie flocke doth know his owne barke by the sounde without missing at any time although there be many flockes together For euerie barke doth vse a different sound the one from the other to the which the duckes are vsed and their eares full thereof so that they neuer fayle their owne barke This manner of liuing is greatly vsed in all that countrie and verie profitable for that it is a victuall most vsed amongst them and is esteemed as a thing of great sustentation and of small price by reason that at al times there is bréeding of them and of small cost Likewise in this Countrey they doo vse a kinde of fishing that is of no lesse industrie then the bringing vppe of these duckes and a thing to be séene The king hath in euerie Citie founded vppon the riuers houses wherein euerie yeare is brought vp many Cormorantes or sea Rauens with whome they doo fishe in those monethes that the fish dooth spawne and that is in this maner following They take the Cormorantes out of their cages and carrie them vnto the riuer side whereas they haue many barkes ordeyned for their fishing and they are halfe full of water Then they take their Cormorantes and with a corde they doo binde their mawes in such sort that no fish can fall into it then they do cast them into the riuer to fish the which they do with such good will and couetousnesse that it is a woonder to sée they throwe themselues into the water with great swiftnesse and diue whereas they do fill their throate with fish Then they come foorth and with the like hast they go vnto the barkes that are halfe ful of water and the fish which they haue taken they put in that water which is put there for that purpose that the fish may not die the which being done they returne againe vnto their fishing as they did before In this order they do indure their fishing foure houres together in such sort that the one doth not trouble the other and when y t their boates with water are ful of fish then do they vnbind them and turne them againe into the riuer for to fish for themselues for they haue neede thereof for that alwayes the day before that they will fish they kéepe thē from their ordinarie victualles which is a litle Millio that they may y e better do their office So after a while that they haue filled their bellies and recreated themselues they take them out of the water and carrie them vnto the ordinarie places whereas they art kept and euerie third day during the time of this fishing they doo take them forth for the same exercise which for them is so great pastime that they would it should indure all the yeare In these thrée monethes they do take so much fish that they do prouide the whole kingdome for all the yeare as in the chapter past it hath béene tolde you which is the occasion that they are as well prouided of fish as of any other thing so that if they please they may eate euerie day fresh fish although they are farre from the sea CHAP. XXIII Of the curtesie that the king of this mightie kingdome doth vnto the Ambassadors that come to him from anie other king prince or comonaltie WE should in the chapter following intreate of the ambassage that king Philip of Spaine with the Christian zeale that he had to sende vnto the king of this kingdome who being mooued by certaine causes and reasons did referre it till a better occasion and we do beléeue that it will be offered shortly Therefore now it shall not be from our purpose to declare in this chapter the honour and curtesie that this king doth vnto the ambassadours of kings princes or any other prouince that doth come vnto him in what sort so euer it be and for that it is of great curiositie it shall be necessarie to declare it with the circumstance wherewith it is done All such as doo enter into this kingdome with the title of ambassadour be it from a king that is a friend or enimie they are respected intreated and made of with so great care and diligence as though they came themselues in person that doo send them Unto whome besides the obseruing the law of nations which is obserued kept among all kings in the worlde in especiall that their persons shall not receiue neither incurre any danger although their ambassage bringeth discontent or harme vnto the king besides all the which there is granted vnto them great and particular priuiledges When that he doth enter into the kingdome by any of
small stature as they for the most part bee in all that prouince hee alighted and came vnto the fathers and his companions who likewise did alight from their little chayres and did salute the one the other with great courtesie And the Captayne tolde them how that the Gouernour did sende him with those souldiers for to receiue him and to beare him companie and howe that hee was in the Citie tarrying their comming with great desire to sée them and commaunded that with all spéede possible they should shorten the way The Captaine came verie well apparelled with a chayne of golde about his necke a man of a good audacitie and vnderstanding Harde vnto his stirryp hee had a page that went with him and carried a great Tira sol made of silke that did shadowe him all ouer The bunnet that this Captaine did weare was like vnto them that before they had séene others weare hee had before him great musicke of trompets and hoybukes wheron they played in great concorde This Captaine with his foure hundreth souldiers did continually garde them till they came vnto the Citie of Chincheo and neuer departed from them a iot the which was done more for pompe and to showe their maiestie then of necessitie for that although the people are infinite without number yet do they weare no weapons for that they are commanded by the lawe of the countrie to the contrarie vpon paine of death of what state or degrée so euer he be but onely the souldiers such as are in euerie towne for the gard thereof and the garrisons that the king hath continually readie to come foorth when that any occasion shall serue In this hie way continually there went and came manye packe horses laden with m●rchandice and other thinges but the most parte of them were Mules The hie wayes are verie brode that twentie men may ride together on a ranke and one not hinder an other and are all paued with great stones and they say that the wayes thoroughout all the other Prouinces be in the same order and was done by a king of that countrie who spent vpon the same a great part of his treasure And it séemeth to be true for that our Spaniards traueling in that countrie ouer high and mightie mountaines yet did they finde the waies plaine in such sort as hath béene told you CHAP. XVI Our Spaniardes ariued at the Citie of Chincheo whereas they were receiued and lodged and what they sawe in that Citie VPon a Saterday being the eleuenth of Iuly came our Spaniards vnto the citie of Chincheo four houres before it was night This citie is of the common sorte in that kingdome and may haue seuentie thousande housholdes It is of great traficke and well prouided of all things for that the sea is but two leagues from it it hath a mightie riuer running alongest by it downe into the sea by which is brought by water and carried downe all kinde of marchandice There is a bridge ouer the sayde riuer which is supposed to bee the fayrest that is in all the worlde it hath a drawe bridge to serue in time of warres or for any other necessitie the bridge is eight hundreth paces long and all wrought with stones of two and twentie foote long and fiue foote broade a thing greatly to bee marueiled at at the entrie thereof there were manie armed souldiers readie to fight who when they came within hargubush shoote did salute them in verie good order There was nigh vnto the sayde bridge in the riuer riding at an anker more than a thousande shippes of all sortes and so great a number of boates and barkes that all the riuer was couered and euerie one full of people that had entred into them for to sée the Castillas for so they did call the Spaniardes in that countrie for the stréetes in the suburbes nor in the Citie could not hold them the number was so great yet their streets are as broade as our ordinarie streetes in anye Citie in all Spaine This Citie is compassed with a strong wall made of stone and is seuen fadam hie and foure fadam broade and vpon the gates many towers wherein is placed their artilerie which is all their strength for that they doo not vse in their kingdome strong castels as they doo in Europe The houses of the Citie are all built after one sorte and fashion but faire and not verie hie by reason of the earth quakes which are ordinarily in that countrie All the stréetes but especially that wherein they passed at their comming thether haue on the one side and on the other sheddes vnder the which are shoppes full of riche marchandice and of great value and verie curious They haue in equal distance the one from the other many triumphant arches which doo set out the stréetes verie much and is vsed in euerie principall streete thorough out all the kingdome in the which they haue excellent market places whereas is to bee bought all thinges that you will desire to be eaten as well of fish as of fleshe fruites herbes comfits conserues and all thinges so good cheape that it is almost bought for nothing Their victualles are verie good and of great substance their hogges flesh whereon they doo féede much is so holsome and good as the mutton in Spaine The fruites that wee did sée some were like vnto them we haue in Spaine and others neuer the like séene by vs afore but of an excellent taste and sauour But in especiall one kinde of fruite which is bigger than a muske million but of the same fashion but of maruellous excellent and precious victuall and pleasant to be eaten a kinde of plummes that is of a gallant taste and neuer hurteth anie bodie although they eate neuer so manie a thing prooued by our Spaniardes many times The stréete that they came in at was so full of people that if a graine of wheate had béene throwne amongest them it would scarce haue fallen to the grounde And although they were carried in little chayres vpon mens backes and the Captaine of whome we speake of before them making way yet were they a great while before they could passe the stréete and be brought vnto a great house which was a couent wherein dwelt religious men of that countrie thether they were brought and lodged beeing verie wearie of the presse of people that did trouble them verie much with desire to take their ease CHAP. XVII The gouernor of Chincheo doth call the Spaniards before him and sheweth vnto them the ceremonies that they must vse to haue aundience THe same day that they came into the cittie as aforesaide was a good while before night with more desire to take rest and ease themselues of their iourney and of the trauell they had in the stréets by reason of the great number of people that came to sée them then to make any visitation that night but the Insuanto or
his commandement he would make them answere And therwith he tooke the letter and the memoriall of the present and commanded in his presence to put about the neckes of the Friers in manner of a scarfe to eyther of them sixe péeces of silke and vnto the souldiers their companions and vnto Omoncon and Sinsay each of them foure péeces and to euerye one of their seruantes two a péece and to giue vnto the two Fryers and the souldiers Omoncon and Sinsay euerie one of them two branches of siluer which is a thing vsed in that countrie vnto them that haue doone some woorthie déede as hath béene tolde you before So with the silke about their neckes and with the branches in their hands they returned out of the hall downe the staires the way they came and so through the court into the stréetes from whence they sawe them shut the court gate with so great a noyse as when they did open it From thence at the request of Omoncon Sinsay they went vnto the house of Totoc who is the Captaine generall of all the men of warre vnto the house of Cagnito● who is y e chiefe standerd bearer their houses were nigh the one the other very faire great They found thē with as great maiestie as the viceroy and in the same order with a table before them had on ech side of thē armed souldiers knéeling on their knées Yet did they not vse our men with the curtesie that the viceroy vsed to cause them to stand vp which was the occasion that straightwayes they made a showe that they would depart and be gone complayning of Omoncon Sinsay for that they did carrie them thether and tolde them with anger that the gouernour of Manilla did intreate them in a different sort who was there resident for the mightiest prince in all the worlde and they but easie marchants neither was their going thether to be equalled vnto the benefite that they cam● thether for This discontent the which they receiued was the occasion that they would n●t go to make any more visitations although the sayde Omoncon and Sinsay for their owne interest would haue carried them to the houses of other officers and gentlemen of the court But they made signes vnto those that were their guides to direct their way vnto their lodgings for that they would goe to eate somewhat and to take their ease the which was ordayned in a great house of the kinges there whereas ordinarily the Iudges doo sit to heare matters of Iustice. So at their comming thether they founde all their stuffe in good order and their dinner marueilous well prouided and the whole house hanged and trimmed as though it had béene for the kings owne person with many wayting men and souldiers those which did gard them both day and night and hanging at the doore two tables or bordes commanded by the viceroy wheron was written who they were that were there lodged and from whence they came and wherefore and that none whosoeuer should be so hardie as to offer them any wrong or disturbance vpon paine to be for the same offence seuerely punished In this house they were more in quiet than in anie other place whereas they had béen neyther did the people giue them so much trouble by reason of the great care which the Iudges had in putting order for the same by the commandemēt of the viceroy yet was it the greatest towne and most populed of all that prouince although in other prouinces there be that be much bigger and is affirmed that the Citie of Taybin or Suntiem there whereas the king and his court is resident hath thrée hundreth thousande housholds and yet there is a bigger Citie in the kingdome called Lanchin which requireth thrée dayes to go from one gate to an other and is in compasse more then seuentie leagues the which is not far distant from Canton that which the Portingalles hath great notice of But of certaine there is very much spoken of the mightinesse of this Citie and I my selfe haue heard reported and affirmed to bee of a trueth by men of authoritie that haue béene in the Citie of Canton religious Fryers of the order of Iesus or Iesuites to whom ought to be giuen credite This Citie of Aucheo hath a verie faire and strong wall made of stone which is fiue fadam high and foure fadam brode the which was measured many times by our people for that they had a gate out of their lodging that did open to the same This wall is all couered ouer with tiles to defende the rayne water for hurting of it which could not to the contrarie but receiue damage for that there is no lyme vsed in the whole wall They haue not one castle in all this Citie neyther is there any vsed in all that kingdome for all their force and strength is in their gates the which be made very strong with a double wall within verie broade betwixt the which are continually many souldiers such as do keepe watch and ward both day and night Upon these gates they haue much ordinance but verie ill wrought I meane such as were séene by our men yet they do say that in other places they haue excellent good and verie curiously wrought The whole wall is full of bartilmentes and theron written the names of such souldiers as are bound to repayre thether in the time of necessitie At euerie hundreth paces they haue lodginges the which are very huge and great there whereas in the time of necessitie doo remaine and dwell their Captaynes so long as their troubles doo indure all the wall is fortified with two great mots or ditches the one within and the other without the which they doo fill at all times when they please by sluces which they haue from the riuer for the same purpose and doo serue of water almost all the houses in the Citie whereas they haue their stanges for the most part full of fish This mightie Citie is situated in a great plaine and compassed round about with mightie rockes and mountaines which is the occasion that it is not so healthfull and the inhabitants saye that it is by reason of the mountaines and many times it is ouerflowen in the winter by spring tides frō the riuer And in that yeare that this doth happen it doth destroy and ruinate a great part of the city as it was at that time when our people did sée it for y t in the winter before they were troubled with these great tides which did them much harme Now to returne to our purpose you shall vnderstand that in the kinges house aforesaide our people remained all the time that they were in this Citie wheras they were made much of and visited by the principall of the same but in especiall of the viceroy who the verie same day di● send to inuite them for the next day following who made vnto them a famous banket
eyes as we would say cats eyes in the which they do differ from them For it is a great maruaile to finde a man amongst them with more then twentie heares in his beard little more or lesse flat noses and their eyes very little so that when they will mocke a man or doo him any iniurie by word they will call him cats eyes Now for that the desire of the Spaniardes was nothing else but to remaine in that countrie for to bring to effect their good zeale they did gratifie the interpreter for the great fauour hee shewed them and did earnestly intreat him for to present the petition thinking thereby their desire should be vnderstood and Gods cause iustified so that they first would enter into them by the way of preaching He presented the petition when that all the Iudges were together who had great pitie and compassion ouer the Spaniardes and willed that they should come before them for that they would sée and vnderstande the roote and foundation of their will They obeyed their commandement with great ioy and when they were come into the hall one of the Iudges who was superiour ouer all the rest and a man of great authoritie did aske of them by way of the interpreter what was their pretence in that they did aske a house to dwell in the Frier Costodio did answere that he did desire it for to learne the language well by which meanes they might the better learne them to know the true God and to set them in the true way to goe and glorie with him because it was his office and his profession The Interpreter tolde all this truely the which fewe times before he had done as hath béene tolde you Then the Iudge in name of all the rest sayde that in that their demand they could not grant neyther had they any such authoritie to giue licence This being spoken the Interpreter replyed without tarrying to heare what the Spaniardes would say and said that at least wayes they would giue them licence to remaine there till such time as the Portingals did come thether for to lade their marchandice which would be within few daies with whom they would go for that they were all of one law faith The Iudge did againe aske thē if that the Portingals Spaniards were al one The father Costodio answered that in religion lawes there was no difference but the one were subiects to one king the other to another although they were kinsmen and tha● very nigh This last petition seemed to the Iudge to be more reasonable and iust than the first and that they might grant it thē with lesse difficultie although he answered them and said that he could not grant it vnto them but he would write vnto the viceroy for to grant it them For that the Portugals would bee there at the farthest within foure or fiue moneths that in the meane time he would giue them a prouision that they may go fréely abroad and none to hurt nor harme them So the next day following which was the second of August he did accomplish his word and promise and sent vnto the viceroy their petition and therewithall his iudgement and of all the rest that were there with him what they thought touching that matter The answere staied many daies after came not but in the ende there came a commandement from the viceroy vnto the gouernor of Canton in the which hee willed that the Spaniards should be sent vnto Aucheo whereas he was and that there should be carried with them all such thinges as they brought with them which was their bookes and ornaments The Iudge did straightwaies send gaue them to vnderstande of this new order because they should make themselues readie for to trauaile the which they did with great ioy and diligence as you shall vnderstand in the chapter following CHAP. VII The Spaniardes take their iourney towards Aucheo declare what happened in the way thitherwarde THe next day following which was the sixtéenth day of August the Spaniards departed frō Canton towards Aucheo to sée the viceroy with great hope and confidence that he would giue them licence for y t which they pretended But at their departure they would haue left there two Indians for to kéepe their ship or frigat but the Iudges that were present said that it was not néedefull for them to haue any such care for that they would take the care vppon them to see all thinges in good order So presently they sent certaine writing in papers and commaunded them to bee glewed vppon the hatches of their shippe in such sort that they could not bee open but they must be perceiued Then presently was brought for the Spaniardes foure barkes verie gallant and wide with verie fayre galleries and windowes and beeing imbarked they charged them verie much to make all haste possible to accomplish the commandement of the viceroy and sent with them conuenient persons for to be their guides and to giue them all thinges necessarie for their iourney They traueiled continually in a mightie riuer against the current in the which they did sée many thinges woorthie to be noted for the space of foure daies that their iourney indured There was alongest the riuer side manie Cities and townes verie great which were so many in number that they could not make any memorie of them by reason that they passed manie of them by night To obserue the tides and to auoid the heate which was great vppon the water Alongest the riuer side whereas it was not inhabited was full of corne fieldes whereas they sawe them go to plough with many Bufalos much different vnto the vse of Spaine for that one alonely buffe did drawe the plough with one vpon his backe who did gouerne and guide him with great ease whether hee would they should go with a corde made fast to a ring at his nose which serued in steede of a bridle They sawe also flockes of géese in the which were more then ●●entie thousand with whom they did weede and tooke away the grasse which did growe amongst the rice and other graine and seedes driuing them in the middest of their fieldes it seemed that they had the vse of reason considering how they did separate and make a distinction betwixt the good seede and the bad and the great care they had to feede and do no harme neither to plucke vp the good plant which was a thing that they wondred at aboue all the rest All the countrie is verie populous and the townes one so néere an other that it may better be sayde to be all one towne and not manie and might with more propertie be called the Citie of China and not the kingdome of China In all the whole countrie there is not one foot of ground vnoccupied by reason of the great abundance of peo-people that there is and they permit amongest them no idle people as more at large it hath béene declared vnto
incredible and so nigh the one vnto the other that they séemed to be al one so in the end of foure dayes they landed at one of the cities where came so much people to sée those strangers that it séemed al the kingdom were there assembled togither were so many in number that before they could get to y e Inne wheras they should be lodged there passed more then foure houres and was in distance but a quarter of a league but when they came thither they were verie faint with the great thrust a●d throng of the people They stayed in this Cittie one day and the next day very early in the morning was brought vnto them horse for to trauel by land other two daies y e which was almost continually in villages townes the third day they were imbarked in a small barke wherein they passed a riuer which had but litle water y e space of two houres thē after they were shipped in a bigger barke and entred into another riuer which seemed to be an arme of the sea in the which they sailed fiue dayes and sawe sailing vp and downe the said riuer so many barks and boats that it made them to be greatly amased These riuers were as wel replenished of cities and townes as the other riuer whereof we haue spoken Al which is a helpe to beleeue that which hath béene said of the mightinesse and the great number of people that are in that mighty kingdom Concluding this riuer they entred into another but not so broade as the last but a swifter current and beset with mightie trées both on the one side and the other and were so thick that almost they could not sée the sunne thorough them and although the country very asper there alongst the riuers side yet was there many walled citties an infinite number of townes and vilages in such sort that the suburbs did almost ioyne the one vnto the other So when they were disembarked out of this riuer they trauelled by land other foure dayes and greatly maruelled to see the great fertilitie of the country and many other things more which they do passe ouer for that in the relation of y e Augustine friers it hath béene declared vnto you In the ende of those foure daies they came to a cittie ten leagues from Chi●cheo and were lodged in the suburbs of the same whether resorted so much people to sée them that although they did shut y e gates to defend themselues from the prease yet could they not be disturbed of the entry for y t they broke the gates climed vp the wals windowes to sée them The host of the house where as they were lodged when he saw that the people did spoile and distroy his house he requested the Spaniards to go forth into a greene fielde which was there harde by placed amongst a company of Orchards the which they did to satisfie him also to satisfie the multitude of people that were come thither only to sée them The noise of the people was so great that the gouernor feared there had bin some other matter commanded a Iudge to go examine the cause and know the truth but when that hee was certified thereof hee commaunded the Spaniards to come vnto his house for that hee was desirous and would sée them They presently did accomplish his commandement and went their way and as they passed thorough the stréete there were certaine representing a comedie but so soone as the people that were there did sée the Spaniardes they left the players all alone and followed them They entred into the gouernors house and found him with great maiestie of seruants and souldiers of his gard he entertayned them with great loue and asked them who they were and from whence they came The interpreter presently shewed the prouision they brought from the viceroy which was in summe their licence giuen by him for them to go vnto Chincheo and that none should disturbe them in their iourney But to ayde and giue them all fauor possible that which was néedefull for their iourney And when that he had read the same he saide that thereby he did vnderstand that which he desired to know how that the viceroy did command all gouernors him as one of them they should offer to do all that lay in them the which he did accomplish and shewed them great fauour and friendship The dext day following they departed out of this citie by land being giuen vnto them by the gouernor very good prouision for the way The same day they came vnto a towne that was very fresh and fiue leagues from the place they departed there they determined to tarrie all that night fearing y e passage through a citie which was but a league before suspecting that they should be as much troubled with the people as they were in the other citie the day before And although this was but a small towne yet was there so great a concourse of people that came from the villages there abouts that it caused them to depart the next morning more early than they thought and all the night they could not sléepe because of the great noyse of the people So within a while after they departed from that towne they came vnto the citie aforesaide the which for situation and gallant buildings was the fairest in all that prouince Through the midst thereof ranne a mightie riuer ouer the which were many bridges very great and most faire Here were they so oppressed with much people that came to sée them that they were detayned in the presse a good while before they could enter into the citie and after they were within they were compassed about in such sort that they could not goe to seeke to eate but were constrained to enter into a barke and go downe the riuer and shroud themselues amongst a company of trées although they did vse this policie Yet the number of people were so great that leapt into the same barke that they were readie to sinke till such time as they that had entred the barke to auoid that perill returned and lept a shoore leauing them all alone with the barkemen and marriners that did rowe who went to seeke and bring them to eate and they remained in the barke all that night So the next day in the morning before the people could come to disturbe them they rowed towards the great and huge citie of Chincheo and entred into the same vppon a sunday in the morning being the sixt day of December They remained still in the barke for their owne quietnesse and security and sent their interpreter with their prouision vnto the Gouernour that he might ordaine at his pleasure that which was therein commanded The Gouernor when he had receiued commission he said vnto the interpreter that he should tell the Spaniards that he was very glad that they were come thither in safetie and in good health and that hee should receiue
Frier Bernardino Beltran for to returne to the said prouince to deliuer the aforesaide two religious men out of danger and from thence to prosecute go forwards with their enterprise begun At this time there were at the said mines by a certaine occasion an inhabitant of the Cittie of Mexico called Antonio de Espeio a very rich man of great courage and industrie and verie zealous in the seruice of the maiestie of king Philip hée was naturally borne of Cordoua who when that he vnderstood the great desire of the saide Friers and howe much it did import did offer himselfe to go on that iournay and to spend theron part of his substance besides the venturing of his life So licence being granted vnto him to prosecute the same by some that did represent the kings person and was procured by the saide Friers there was appointed and giuen him for captaine Iohn de Ontiueros who was chiefe bayley for his maiestie in the townes which are called the foure Cienegas which are in the gouernement of the new Biscay seuenty leagues from the aforesaid mines of S. Barbora and he to go with him and gather togither men and souldiers such as he could for to accompany him and helpe to follow their Christian intent The said Antonio de Espeio was so earnest in this matter that in a few dayes he had ioyned togither souldiers and made prouision necessarie for the iourney and spent therein a great part of his substance and departed altogether from the valley of saint Bartholmew the tenth of Nouember 1582. and carry with him for whatsoeuer should happen one hundred and fiftéene horses and mutes great stoare of weapons and munition with victuals and certaine people of seruice in this iourney necessarie He directed his iourney towards the North and at two dayes iourney they came whereas were a great companie of Indians of those which be called Conchos they were in raches and in houses made of straw who when they vnderstoode of their comming by relation of long time before they went forth and entertained them with shewes of great ioy The feeding of these people of al the rest of that prouince the which is great is of Conyes ●lesh Hares venison of y e which they haue great aboundance They haue great store of Maiz which is wheat of the Indians pompines mellons very good and in aboundance They haue many riuers full of fish very good and of diuers sorts they go almost al naked and the weapons that they doo vse are bowes and arrowes and liue vnder the gouernement and lorship of Caciques as they of Mexico they found no Idols amongst them neither could they vnderstande that they did worship any thing for the which they did easilie consent that the Spaniards should set vp crosses and were very well content therewith after that that they were informed by the Spaniards the signification thereof the which was done by interpreters that they carried with them by whose meanes they vnderstood of other inhabitances whether as y e said Conchos did conduct thē did beare thē company more then foure and twenty leagues all which way was inhabited with people of their owne nation and in al places whereas they came they were receiued with peace by aduice that was giuen by the Caciques from one towne to another So hauing passed the foure and twenty leagues aforesaide they came vnto another nation of Indians called Passaguates who liue after the manner and fashion of the other aforesaid Conchos their borderers who did vnto them as the others did conducting them forwarde other foure dayes iourney with aduice of the Caciques as afore The Spaniards found in this iourney many mines of siluer according to the iudgement of them that vnderstand that faculty of very rich mettall One iourney from this they came to another nation called the Tobosos who when they discouered the Spaniards they fled vnto the mountaines left their townes houses void but more after they vnderstood y t certain yeares past there came vnto that place certaine souldiers for to seeke mines carried with them captiue certaine of the natural people of that country for which occasion they remaine as scared feareful The captain forthwith gaue order that they should be called backe again with assurance that there should be no hurt done to them did so much that many of thē returned of whom they made much on and gaue them giftes declaring vnto them by the interpreter that they came not thither to do hurt to any with the which they all returned and were in quiet and consented that they should set vp crosses and declare the mysterie of them and they made shew that they were content therewith and did accompany them as the other their borderers did vntil they had brought them into the inhabitance of another differēt nation which was distant from them twelue leagues They vse bowes and arrowes and do go naked CHAP. VIII Here he doth prosecute the discouering of the new Mexico THe nation that the saide Tobosos did conduct them to are called Iumanos who by another name are called by the Spaniards Patara Bueyes their prouince is very and full of townes w t much people their houses made of lime stone and their townes traced in very good order al the men womē haue their faces raced their legs armes they are corpulent people more decent then any that they had séene vntil that time they haue great store of prouision and hunt both of beasts and foules great store of fish by reason of mightie riuers that commeth from the North some of them as big as Guadalquiuiz y e which doth enter into y e North sea they haue many lakes of salt water which in certaine times of y e yeare do congeale and they do make therof good salt They are warlike people made shew thereof presently for the first night y t the Spaniards had placed thēselues with their arrowes they slew fiue horse hurt as many more and would haue left not one aliue if they had not béene defended by the guarde When they had done this mischiefe they left the town went to a mountain which was harde by whether as presently in the morning went their captaine with other fiue souldiers well armed with an interpreter called Peter a naturall Indian borne and with faire words and perswasions he quieted them and made peace and caused them to descend into their towne and houses and perswaded them to giue aduice vnto their neighbours that they were men that would hurt no bodie neither came they thither to take away their goods the which he obtained easely by wisedome and in giuing vnto the Caciques certaine glasse beades and hartes which they carryed for that purpose other trifles so with this and with the good intretement done vnto them there went many of them in the company of
day and carrie them vnto his mansion or dwelling All this kingdome is so fertile as well for the ordinarie watring as also for the temperature of the heauen that almost all the whole yeare they do gather fruits but in especiall of wheat and rice so that both the one and the other are very good cheape that our people in the discourse of their trauaile or pilgrymage did buy one pyco of rice or of wheate meale which is fiue rou●s of Spaine for one ryall and a halfe according vnto this rate al other thinges beare their prices as hath béene before declared They say that in this countrie there be many elephants lyons tygres ownses other brute breastes of the which these friers sawe verie few aliue but many skins of them which is a signe that it is of truth There are many beasts whereof come the muske the which are of the tygres like vnto a litle dogge the which they do kill put them vnder the ground certaine dayes and after that it is putrified rotten the flesh and bloud is conuerted into that swéete powder There be also many cyuet cats little worth a great number of horse although those which the said friers did sée were litle yet is it a common voice fame that in some of the fiftéene prouinces there are very good but they were not there so that they can not say they had seene thē But the hens géese duckes and other poultrie that are in all partes of this kingdome are without number which is the occasion that they are of small estimation the abundance of fish ia no lesse as well of the sea as of the riuers in the which they are conformable All they that do declare of the thinges of this countrie and the small price that it is solde for is such that the saide Frier doth affirme and others that haue bin in that kingdome that for the value of sixe marauadies which is a pennie may four companions eat very wel of flesh fish rice and fruits and drinke good wine of that countrie In all this kingdome there are many mynes both of gold and siluer and all verie rich but the king will not let them be labored but with great lymitation saying that which is in those mynes be in his house and that they should procure to bring it from other kingdomes yet notwithstanding the abundance is so great both of the one and the other and so cōmon that there is no man although he be of an occupation but hee hath in his house things both of gold and siluer and other very rich iewels They do estéeme for his value more the siluer than the golde and they say the cause is for that the prices of golde are variable as in Italie but the siluer is alwaies at one s●aye and price There are great store of pearles but in especiall in the Iland of Aynao and great abundance of quickesiluer copper yron steele laton tyn lead salt peter brimstone and other things which were woont to beautifie a kingdome but aboue all there is very much muske and amber gryce The king of this kingdome besides the great rent the which he hath it is saide that he hath great treasories in all the principall cities those which are the head cities of the prouinces for the confirmance thereof it was affirmed vnto the saide fryer for a verie certaintie that in the citie of Canton all the money that hath entred into the same for y e space of fiue hundred yeres as well by way of the Portingals as by those of the kingdom of Cyan and others their borderers and all the tributes of that prouince is altogether in the kings treasure house of that citie which amounteth vnto by good account many more millions than may be well numbred for to giue credite thereunto It is as common for the people of this countrie to weare silke as in Europe to weare lynnen yea they do make their shooes thereof some of satten and many times of cloth of golde of verie gallant colours the cause is by reason of the great abundance that they haue therof and is of so great quantitie that it is carried from the Citie of Canton vnto the Protingall Indians more than thrée thousand kintals euery yeare besides a great quantitie which is carried vnto Iapon and ordinarily more than ●iftéene ships laden for the Ilandes of Luzon The Sianes and other nations doo also carrie away a great quantitie and although there are carried away ordinarily as afore saide yet there remaineth so great quantity in that kingdome that many fleetes may be laden therewith There is also great store of ●laxe cotton and other kinde of webstrie and also good cheape that the aforesaide Fryer dooth affirme that he hath seene solde a canga which is fiftéene fadam for foure ryals of plate The fine earthen dishes that are in this countrie cannot be declared without many wordes But that which is brought from thence into Spaine is verie course although vnto them that hath not séene the finer sort it seemeth excellent good but they haue such with them that a cubba●d thereof amongest vs would be esteemed as though it were of golde The finest cannot be brought foorth of the kingdome vpon paine of death neyther can any haue the vse therof but onely the Loytias which be there gentlemen as hath béen tolde you There is great quantitie of sugar honie and waxe and verie good cheape as aforesaide And in conclusion I say that they liue with so great abundance that all things do flow so that they lacke nothing necessarie for their bodies but for their soules which is the principallest they do lack as you haue vnderstoode in the discourse of this historie God remedie the same at his pleasure The rent which the king of this kingdome hath is declared vnto you in a proper chapter of it selfe so that in this I will declare that which the sayde fryer tolde me and is onely of one riuer which is called the riuer of the salt and is in the prouince of Canton and is worth vnto him euerie yeare a million and a halfe And although the ordinarie rent the which he hath euery yeare dooth exceede the greatest king that is nowe knowen in all the world in quantitie yet in his treasories which be gathered together and kept if it be true that the Chinos do say in euery principall citie of these fiftéene prouinces is more than a great number of kings togither haue or can procure no nor come nigh vnto it by a great deale All the cities and townes of this kingdome are walled about with stone walles and at euerie fiftéene paces a bulwarke and without the wall commonly all of them haue a riuer or else a great déepe moote wherein they may bring water at all times with the which they are very strong they doo vse no fortes neyther haue they any but
and 6. men may walke side by side on them they are garnished with many bulworks and towers a small distance the one from the other with their battlements faire galleries where as many times their vizroyes dooth goe to recreate themselues with the gallant sight of the mountaines and riuers with their fields so odoriferous There is betwixt the wals of their cities the mote of the same a broade space that six horsemen may ride together the like space is within betwixt the walles and the houses whereas they may walke without impediment Their wals are kept in such good reparation by reason of their great care and diligence that they séeme to be but new made yet in some cities there is founde mention of two thousand yeeres since the first foundation In euery citie the king doth ordaine a Iustice and giueth him great rents onely to visit them and make them to be renewed and repaired where as is requisite and is done vpon the kings cost for out of his rents in such cities townes is giuen them all that is néedfull to be asked The high waies in all this kingdome are made kept plaine with great care diligence and the entering into the cities and townes are very sumptuous and with great maiestie they haue thrée or foure gates bound with yron very strong Their streetes verie well paued and so broad that 15. horsemen may ride together in them and so straight that although they be very long yet you may discouer the end On both the sides are portals vnder which be their shops full of all sorts of merchandises very curious and of all occupations that you will desire In the streets a good space the one from the other are made manie triumphall arkes of extreme bewtie They are made of masons worke verie curiously painted after the fashion of the old antiquitie of Rome All their houses ordinarily haue three doores that in the middest is great the other be lesser but of a maruellous gallant propotion The king is alwayes resident in the citie of Suntien which in their language is as much to say the citie of heauen Of which citie the Chinos do declare many things which séemeth to be true for that if you do talke with many of them and at sundrie times and places yet doo they not varie the one from the other and according to their report it should be greatest in all the worlde in these dayes They who do make it to be least do affirme that to goe from gate to gate leauing the suburbs had néed of a summers day and a good horse to do it it is also called Quinsay as Marcus Paulus doth call it CHAP. IX Of the wonderfull buildings in this kingdome and of mightie wall or circuit in the same of 500. leagues long IN this kingdome in al places there be men excellent in architecture and the necessaries that they haue to build with is the best that is in the world For as it is said in the chapter past they haue a kinde of white earth of the which they make brickes of so great hardnesse and strength that for to breake them you must haue pickaxes and vse much strength and this is the cause that in all the kingdome there is mightie buildings and verie curious Putting apart the kings pallace where hee is resident in Taybin for of that you shall haue a particular chapter in all such cities that bee the heads of the prouinces is resident a vizroy or gouernour and dwelleth in the house that in euery such citie the king hath ordeined on his proper cost all the which to conclude are superbious and admirable and wrought by marueilous art and are as bigge as a great village by reason that they haue within them great gardens water ponds woods compassed about in the which as it is declared in the 4. chapter is great quantitie of hunt and flying foules Their houses commonly be verie gallant and after the manner of Rome and generallie at the doores and gates of them are planted trées in gallant order the which maketh a gallant shadow and séemeth well in the stréets All these houses are within as white as milke in such sort that it séemeth to bee burnished paper The floares are paued with square stones verie broad and smooth their seelings are of an excellent kind of timber verie well wrought and painted that it séemeth like damaske and of the colour of gold that sheweth verie well euerie one of them hath three courts and gardens full of flowers and herbes for their recreation And there is none of them but hath his fish poole furnished although it bee but small The one side of their courts is wrought verie gallant like as it is in counting houses vpon the which they haue many idols carued and wrought of diuers kinds ofmettals the other thrée parts or angles of their courts are painted with diuers things of verie great curiositie But aboue all things they are marueilous cleane not onely in their houses but also in their stréetes in the which commonly they haue thrée or foure necessarie or common places of ease verie curiously ordained and placed for that the people being troubled with their common necessitie shall not foule the streetes and therefore they haue this prouision the like is vsed in all wayes throughout the kingdome Some cities there be whose streets be nauigable as in Bruxels in Flanders Mexico in the Indians and as in Venice in Italie which is the occasion that they are better serued and prouided for that their barkes and boates doo enter laden with all kinde of victuals harde to their doores The highwayes throughout all this kingdome are the best and gallantest paued that euer hath béene discouered they are verie plaine yea vnto the mountaines and they are cut by force of labour and pickaxes and maintained with bricke and stone the which by report of them which hath séene it is one of the worthiest things that is in all the realme There are many mightie bridges and of a wonderfull making some wrought vpon boats as it is in Syuill but in especiall vpon such riuers as are broad and déepe In the citie of Fucheo there is a towre right against the house of the kings chiefe receiuer it is affirmed by those that haue séene it to surmount any building that hath béene amongst the Romanes the which is raised and founded vppon fortie pillars and euerie pillar is of one stone so bigge and so high that it is strange to tell them and doubtfull to the hearers to beléeue it for which cause I thinke it best not to declare it in particular as I do in all things where as I doo finde it difficult to be beléeued and where I haue no certaine author to verifie the truth There is in this kingdome a defence or wall that is fiue hundred leagues long and beginneth at the citie Ochyoy which is vppon the high mountaines and
there be that bee verie curiouslie wrought and faire which may bée of such which the Captaine Artieda did sée who in a letter that hee wrote vnto king Phillip giuing him to vnderstande of the secreats of this countrie amongst which hee saide the Chinos doo vse all armour as wee doo and the artilerie which they haue is excellent good I am of that opinion for that I haue séene vessels there of huge greatnesse and better made then ours and more stronger In euerie Citie they haue certaine houses where they make their ordinance and artilerie continuallie they doo not plant them on Castles for that they haue not the vse of them in all the kingdome but vppon the gates of their cities which hath mightie great and thicke walles and déepe ditches which they doo fill with water out of the next riuer at all times when néede requireth which they account the greatest strength in all the kingdome At euerie gate of the Citie there is a Captaine with manie souldiours that keepeth watch and warde night and daie to suffer no stranger to enter in without especiall lycence of the gouernour of the Citie or towne By this that I haue alredie saide as seemeth vnto mée is apparantlie shewed and declared the antiquitie of Artilerie in this kingdome and howe that they there were the first inuenters thereof Likewise it dooth plainely appéere that there was the first inuention of printing a thing as strange as the other whose antiquitie in that kingdome shalbe shewed in the Chapter following CHAP. XVI Of the antiquitie and manner of printing of bookes vsed in this kingdome long before the vse in our Europe THe admirable inuention and the subtill ingenie of printing is such that for lacke of the vse thereof should haue béene forgotten the worthinesse of manie excellent men and of their déedes doone in the happie daies and times long past and manie in these our daies woulde not trouble themselues so much as they doo in learning to get honour and promotion or in feates of warres if that their fame should no longer continue in writing then their liues on the earth Leauing apart the woonderfull effectes of this subtile inuention least speaking thereof I shoulde be ouer tedious I will heere onelie goe about to prooue that which this Chapter dooth propounde with some ensamples whereof manie are found in their histories and likewise in ours It doth plainelie appeare by the vulgar opinion that the inuention of printing did beginne in Europe in the yeare 1458. the which was attributed vnto Toscan called Iohn Cutembergo and it was saide of trueth that the first mould wherewith they doo print was made in Maguncia from whence an Almaine called Conrado did bring the same inuention into Italie And the first booke that was printed was that which saint Austine did write intituled De ciuitate Dei wherein manie authors agrée But the Chinos doo affirme that the first beginning was in their countrie and the inuentour was a man whome they reuerence for a saint whereby it is euident that manie yeares after that they had the vse therof it was brought into Almaine by the way of Ruscia and Moscouia from whence as it is certaine they may come by lande and that some merchants that came from thence into this kingdome by the redde sea and from Arabia Felix might bring some ●ooks from whence this Iohn Cutembergo whom the histories dooth make authour had his first foundation The which béeing of a trueth as they hau● authoritie for the same it dooth plainelie appeare that this inuention came from them vnto vs and for the better credite heereof at this day there are found amongst them many bookes printed 500. yeares before the inuention began in Almanie of the which I haue one and I haue séene others as well in Spaine and in Italie as in the Indies The Frier Herrada and his companions when they came from the China vnto the Philippinas did bring with them manie printed bookes of diuers matters which they did buy in the Citie of Aucheo the which were printed in diuers places of the kingdome Yet the most part of them were printed in the prouince of Ochian whereas is the best print and as they did report they woulde haue brought a great number more if that the vizroy had not disturbed them for they haue great libraries and very good cheape but hée suspected that those bookes might be a meane to giue them to vnderstande the secrets of their kingdome the which they doo indeuour to kéepe close from strangers The vizroy vsed a policie and sent them word how that he was certified that they went about buying of bookes for to carry them into their countrie and howe they shoulde not spende their many on them for hée woulde giue them for nothing so manie bookes as they woulde haue which afterward hée did not performe possible for the reason aforesaide or else he did forget his promise At such time as this commandement came vnto them they had bought a good number out of the which are taken the most things that wée haue put in this small historie for to giue a briefe notice of them and of that kingdome till such time as by a true certificate the experience of manie shall cause more credite thereunto for that vnto this day by reason of the small notice wée haue we cannot with so great authoritie make it so credible as wee hope that time hereafter will doo The which hath mooued mee yea and constrained me to leaue to intreat of manie things which in those parts are to bée credited yea and are most true and for the same I haue béene blamed and reprehended by such as haue had perfite notice thereof And nowe for that I will not go from my purpose you shall vnderstand in the Chapter following whereof these bookes that they brought doo intreat that the better you may giue credite vnto the curiositie and policie of that kingdome as in manie places I haue declared and hereafter will declare CHAP. XVII The substance and manner of those bookes that Frier Herrada and his companions brought from China THey brought with them a great number of bookes as wée haue said that did intreate of diuers matters as you shall perceiue in the sequele Of the description of all the whole kingdome of China and the placing of the 15. prouinces and the length and bredth of euerie one of them and of other kingdomes bordering vppon them Of all tributes and rentes belonging vnto the king and of all the orders of his royall pallace and of his ordinarie pensions that hee giueth and the names of all officers in his house and how far euery office doth extend How many tributaries euerie prouince hath and the number of such as are frée from tribute and the order and time how and when they are to be recouered For the making of ships of all sorts and the order of nauigation with the altitudes of euery port and the quantitie of
his people and the fort and with that furie they slewe more then one hundreth Chinos and tooke prisoners seuentie women which they founde in the same trench but when that Lymahon vnderstoode the rumour he tooke himselfe straightwayes to his fort which he had made for to defend himselfe from the kinges nauie if they should happen to finde him out and there to saue his life vpon that extremitie he commaunded some of his souldiers to goe foorth and to skirmish with the Spaniardes who were verie wearie with the trauaile of all that day and with the anguish of the great heate with the burning of the ships and the trench which was intollerable for that they all burned together The Captaines séeing this and that their people were out of order neither could they bring them into any for that they were also weary although y e general of the field did succour thē in time the which did profite them much yet did they sound a retraite did withdraw themselues with the losse of fiue Spaniards and thirtie of the Indians their friends and neuer a one more hurt Then the next day following the Generall of the fielde did bring his souldiers into a square battle and began to march towards the fort with courage to assalt it if occasion did serue thereunto hee did pitch his campe within two hundreth paces of the fort and founde that the enimie did all that night fortifie himselfe verie well and in such sort that it was perilous to assalt him for that he had placed vpon his fort thrée péeces of artilerie and many bases besides others ingins of fire worke Seing this that his péeces of artilerie that hee brought were very small for to batter and little store of munition for that they had spent all at the assalt which the rouer did giue them at Manilla the Generall of the fielde and the captaines concluded amongst themselues that séeing the enimie had no ships to escape by water neither had hee any great store of victuals for that all was burnt in the ships it was the best and most surest way to besiege the fort and to remaine there in quiet vntill that hunger did constraine them either to yéeld or come to some conclusion which rather they will then to perish with hunger This determination was liked well of them all although it fell out cleane contrarie vnto their expectation for that in the space of thrée monethes that siege indured this Limahon did so much that within the fort he made certaine small barks and trimmed them in the best manner he coulde wherewith in one night hee and all his people escaped as shall bee tolde you a thing that séemed impossible and caused great admiration amongst the Spaniards and more for that his departure was such that he was not discouered neither by them on the water nor on the lande What happened in these thrée monethes I doo not here declare although some attempts were notable for that my intent is to declare what was the occasion that those religious men and their consorts did enter into the kingdome of China and to declare of that which they said they had séene for the which I haue made relation of the comming of Limahon and of all the rest which you haue heard CHAP. VIII Omoncon captain of the king of China commeth to seeke Limahon and doth meete with Spaniards IN the meane time that the siege indured at the fort as you haue vnderstood there went and came certaine vessels which brought victuals and other necessaries from the cittie of Manilla which was but fortie leagues from the mouth of that riuer of Pagasinan as hath béene tolde you It happened vppon a day that a shippe of Myguel de Loarcha wherein was Frier Martin de Herrada Prouinciall of the Augustine Friers who was come vnto the riuer Pagansinan for to sée the Generall of the fielde and in the same shippe returned vnto Manilla to hold Capitulo or court in the saide Ilande and port of Buliano Seuen leagues after they were out of the mouth of Pagasinan they mette with a shippe of Sangleyes who made for the port and thinking them to bée enimies they bore with them hauing another shippe that followed them for their defence and had no more in them but the saide prouinciall and fiue Spanyards besides the mariners This shippe of Sangley séeing that hee did beare with them woulde haue fledde but the winde woulde not permit him for that it was to him contrarie which was the occasion that the two shippes wherein the Spanyards were for that they did both saile and rowe in a small time came within Cannon shot In one of the shippes there was a Chino called Sinsay one that had béene many times at Manilla with merchandise and was a verie friend and knowne of the Spanyards and vnderstoode their language who knowing that shippe to be of China and not to be a rouer did request our people not to shoote neither to doo them any harme vntill such time as they were informed what they were in that same shippe This Sinsay went straight wayes into the fore shippes and demaunded what they were and from whence they came and bing well informed he vnderstoode that he was one of the ships of warre that was sent out by the king of China to séeke the rouer Limahon who leauing the rest of the fléet behinde came forth to séeke in those Ilands to see if he coulde discouer him to be any of them and the better to bee informed thereof they were bounde into the port of Buliano from whence they came with their two shippes from whome they woulde haue fledde thinking they had béene some of the rouers shippes Being fully perswaded the one of the other they ioyned togither with great peace and friendshippe the Spanyards straightwayes entred into their boate and went vnto the shippe of the Chinos and carried with them the aforesaid Sinsay for to be their interpreter and ●o speake vnto the Chinos In the saide shippe came a man of great authoritie who was called Omoncon who brought a commission from their king and shewed it vnto the Spanyards and vnto the father Prouinciall in the which the king and his councell did pardon all those souldiers that were with Limahon if that forthwith they would leaue him and returne vnto the kings part and likewise did promise great gifts and fauour vnto him that did either take or kill the aforesaid rouer Then did Sinsay declare vnto him of the comming of the rouer vnto the Ilands and all that happened in the siege of the Cittie as aforesaide and howe they had him besieged in the riuer of Pagansinan from whence it was not possible for him to escape The captain Omoncon reioyced very much of these newes and made many signes of great content and did embrace the Spanyards many times and gaue other tokens wherby he di● manifest the great pleasure he receiued and woulde therewith straight-waies
called them all to naught from the poope of his shippe with manie reprochfull woordes saying that they came to steale the honour that hee with so great trauayle and perill had gotten Then the generall séeing that he could not goe thorough with his purpose hee determined to leaue him and therewith to cast about with his shippes and returned into the port of the baye from whence they came This brought in his shippe a sonne of Sinsay to giue occasion vnto his father for to come vnto him and likewise his owne father whome they did straightwayes put in prison and his wife and mother which is a thing commonly vsed in that countrie the children to pay for their parentes and to the contrarie the parents for the children Sinsay who feared the same woulde not goe vnto his owne house till such time as he did carrie commandement from the Uiceroy for to deliuer out of prison those that were put there without desert the which was granted by the Uiceroy with other fauours and great honour as shall bee declared vnto you CHAP. XIII Omoncon doth disembarke himselfe with our Spaniardes in the port of Tanfuso and are verie well receiued by the Iustice and made verie much of by the order of the Insuanto of that prouince WIthin a little while after that the Captayne of the sixe shippes departed for Chincheo Omoncon and his companie ariued at the port of Tanfuso hard by vpon wednesday in the euening being the fift day of Iuly This Tanfuso is a gallant and fresh towne of foure thousand housholders and hath continually a thousand souldiers in garrison and compassed about with a great and strong wall and the gates fortified with plates of yron the foundations of all the houses are of lime stone and the walles of lime and yearth and some of bricke their houses within very fairely wrought with great courts their stréetes faire and brode all paued Before that Omoncon did come vnto an anker they sawe all the souldiers and the people of the towne were gathered together vpon the rockes that were ioyning vnto the port all armed readie vnto the battaile amongst whom there was a principall captaine thrée more of his companions that were sent him by the Gouernor of Chincheo whom they do call in their language Insuanto who had vnderstāding of the cōming of Omoncon his companie by the ship aforesaid he sent thē thither before that in his name should entertain them cherish them all that was possible When the ship entred into the port Omoncon did salute the towne with certain péeces of artilery discharged all his hargubushes sixe times about therwithal tooke in their saile and let anker fall Then straightwaies the captaine whō the Insuanto had sent came abord the ship who had expresse cōmission not to leaue the company of our people after that they were disembarked till such time as they came whereas he was but to beare them companie and to prouide them of all thinges necessarie the which he did accomplish All these captaines and ministers of the king doo weare certaine ensignes for to be knowen from the common people who are not permitted to weare any such and they can not goe abroad in publike without the same neyther will they if they might for that by them they are obeyed and reuerenced as well in the stréetes as in any other place where they come all such generally be called Loytias which is as much to say in our language Gentlemen the particular ensignes which they doo vse bee broade wastes or girdles embossed after diuerse manners some of golde and siluer some of the shell of a Turtuga or Turtell and of a swéete wood and other some of Iuerie the higher estates hath them embrodered with pearles and precious stones and their bunnets with two long eares and their buskins made of satten and vnshorne veluet as we haue declared more at large in the first thrée bookes Then after so soone as they were come to an anker in the port the Iustice did send them a license in writing for to come foorth of the shippe as a thing necessarie for that without it the waiters or guardes of the water side will not suffer them to put foote a land This licence was written vpon a borde whited and firmed by the Iustice whose charge it is to giue the licence Then when they came a shoore there were the souldiers that were appointed by the Insuanto in a readinesse to beare them companie and did direct and leade them vnto the kinges houses of the sayde Citie the like hath euerie Citie almost thoroughout all the kingdome there they did lodge them These houses are very great and very wel wrought and gallant with faire courtes belowe and galleries aboue they had in them stanges or pondes of water full of fish of sundrie sortes The Insuanto had giuen order vnto the Iustice of Tansuso wherein he had ordained what hee should giue them to eate and all other things that should be done particularly by it selfe without lacking ofany thing and appointed the Captaine that he with his souldiers should not depart from them not a iot but alwaies to beare them company whethersoeuer they went and not to depart till he had farther order from him in accomplishing whereof they remayned with them that night in the kings house The Iustice of the citie when that he had lodged them went himselfe in person to the waters side and caused all their stuffe to be vnladen out of the ship and caused it to be carried with great care and diligence vnto the Fryers whereas they were The people of the citie did presse very much to sée these strangers so that with the presse as also with the great heate they were marueilously afflicted which being perceiued by the Iustice he gaue order that they might bee eased of that trouble caused sergeants to kéepe the doore and their yeomen to make resistance against the people Yet notwithstanding though they did not trouble them so much they ranged round about the house and clymed vpon the walles to procure to sée them as a rare thing for that they came from countries so farre off and apparelled verie different from that they do vse or otherwise haue séene So when that the night was come the Iustice of the citie did make them a banket according vnto the fashion of the countrie and it was in this manner following They were carried into a hall that was verye curiously wrought wherein were many torches and waxe candles light and in the middest therof was set for euerie one of the guests a table by himselfe as is the vse fashion of that countrie which more at large shalbe de●lared euerie table had his couering of damaske or satten very well made the tables were gallantly painted without any table clothes neither do they vse any for they haue no néede of them for that they do eate all their victualles with
brode wrought with lyme and stone full of loope holes and watch towers And as they passed through the stréetes there came foorth of a house a very honest man as it séemed who was very well apparelled stayed them for that in the same house there were certaine dames principall personages that did sée them a farre off and not content therewith they did request them with great courtesie for to enter into the house that they might the better sée thē the which they did straightwaies accomplish and entring in they were brought into a court whereas was set chayres for them to sit downe and the Ladies were there a little frō them beholding them with great honestie and grauitie Then a little after they sent them a banket with marchpanes and sweet meats made of sugar which they did eate without any curiositie dronke after the same The banket being done they made signes and tokens vnto thē that they receiued great content with their sight and that they might depart when y t their peasure was the which they did after y t they had made great curtesies with thankes for their friendship receiued of both parts So after they had taken their leaue they went to see a house of pleasure y t was hard by y e town wall wrought vpon the water with verie faire galleries open lodges for to banket in made of masons worke therin many tables finely painted round about it sesterns of water wherin was store of fish ioyning vnto thē tables of very faire alabaster all of one stone and the least of them was of eight spannes long and rounde about them were brookes of running water that gaue a pleasaunt sounde in the meane time they were banketting and nigh thereunto many gardynes full of all sortes of flowers And a little from that place they sawe a bridge all of Masons worke and the stones verie well wrought and of a mightie biggnesse they measured some of them that were twentie and two and twentie foote long and fiue foote brode and séemed vnto them that it was a thing impossible to be layde there by mans handes Of this bignesse yea and bigger they did sée layde vppon manie other bridges in the discourse of their voyage going to Chincheo and Au●heo In this towne they tarried and rested themselues all that night marueiling verie much at that which they had seene The next day in the morning when they were vp and readie they found in the house all thinges in a readinesse and in verie good order for their departure as well their little chayres and horse as for men to carrie their stuffe and apparell which did not a little make them to marueile how that euerie one of thē with a waster vpon their shoulders did deuide their burden in two partes sixe roues before and sixe roues behinde and did trauaile with the same with so great ease and swiftnes that the horse could not indure with them They went vnto the Ticoan his house he who sent them the present ouer night to giue him thankes for his courtesie and to take their leaue of him They found him with great maiestie but yet gaue them great good entertainment and craued pardon at their hands if that he did not giue them the entertainement and courtesie as they deserued He did likewise put vpon each of them two péeces of silke in the same order as the gouernour of Tansuso did So when they had surrendred vnto him thankes they tooke their leaue and departed from Chincheo whereas was the Insuanto or gouernor by whose order was showed vnto them all the courtesie as you haue hearde CHAP. XV. The Spaniardes doo prosecute their iourney to Chincheo and seeth many notable thinges by the way FRom this towne of Tangoa vnto Chincheo is thirteene leagues and so plaine way that it giueth great content to trauaile it in all the waye they could not see one spanne of ground but was tilled and occupied The like they doo saye is of all the grounde that is in the whole kingdome it is full of people and the townes one so néere to an other that almost you can not iudge them to bee manie townes but one for that there was but a quarter of a league distant one towne from an other and it was tolde vnto them that in all the Prouinces of the kingdome it is populared in the same order All their ground they till is watered which is the occasion of the frutefulnesse thereof so that they doo gather fruite all the yeare long and our Spaniardes did sée in all places whereas they came that they were gathering of rice some newe sprong vp some with eares and some rype They doo plough and till their ground with kine Bufalos and bulles which are verie tame and although they be great yet be their hornes but of a spanne long and turning backwards to the tayle in such sort that they can not do any hurt or harme with them they do gouerne them with a corde that is made fast to a ring that is in their nose and in like sort do they gouerne the Bufanos They doo féede them commonly in the fieldes of rice for that they haue no other grasinges and all the time that they are féeding a boy doth ride on euerie one of them to disturbe them that they doo no harme therein But to eate the wéedes and grasse that doo grow in the rice In this prouince and all the rest of the fiftéene in that kingdome they gather much wheate and excellent good barley péese Borona Millo Frysoles Lantesas Chiches and other kindes of graines and séedes whereof is great abundance and good cheape But the chiefest thing that they do gather and a victuall that is most vsed amongest them and the borderers there aboutes is rice All the hie waies are couered with the shadowe of verie faire orchardes which do garnish it verie much and they are planted in verie good order and amongest th●m there are shoppes whereas is solde all manner of fruites to the comfort of all such as doo trauaile by the way which is an infinite number some on foote some on horsebacke and others in little chayres Their waters by the hie waies are verie good and light although the wether at that time was verie hoat especially at noone time yet was the water of their welles and fountaynes verie coole The same day when they had trauayled halfe way they saw a farre off comming marching towardes them in verye good order a squadron of souldiers which at the first caused them to maruaile and to be a fraide till such time as they drewe nigher it was tolde vnto them that it was the Captayne of the garde vnto the Insuanto or Gouernour of Chincheo who came by his order to receiue them with foure hundred souldiers verie well armed with pickes and hargubushes and well apparelled So soone as the Captaine came vnto them he was mounted on a bay horse but of
thing very much vsed in that countrie the Spaniards went vnto the Insuanto who was there with great company and maiestie hee entertained them very friendly and with chéerefull words making an outward shew that hee bare them great loue and that their departure was vnto him a great griefe Then hee requested them to giue him a remembrance of such thinges as was necessarie and néedfull for their prouision for the sea for that hee woulde giue order for the prouiding of the same the which he did and was with so great aboundance that they had for the voyage and remained a great deale to spare Hee then commaunded to bee brought thither cates to eat and drinke and gaue it them with his owne hands as well the one as the other hee himselfe did eate and drinke with them which is the greatest fauour that can be shewed amongst them The banquet being ended he commaunded them in his presence to go abord their shippes because that was a luckie day and also to accomplish that which the vizroy had commaunded which was that they should not depart from thence vntil they had first séene them imbarked The Spaniards obeyed the commandement and tooke their leaue of the Insuanto with great curtesie and reuerence and with outward shewes that they remained indebted for the great curtesie and good will that they had receiued and therewith they departed to the waters side towards the boat which was tarrying for them As they passed by the religious men that before we spake of they saw a great table set and vppon it a whole Oxe with his throte cut and hard by the same a Hogge and a Goate other thinges to bee eaten the which they had ordained for to make sacrifice which they do vse in the like affaires They being imbarked in the boate they were carried aborde the Admirall which was the shippe appointed for them to go in then presently they beganne to stirre the shippe from one place vnto another with certain boates and cables which they had there readie for the same purpose The shippe did not so soone begin to moue but the religious men a shore did beginne their sacrifice the which did indure vntill night ending their feastes and triumphes in putting forth of the cittie and vppon their gates many cressets and lights The souldiers shot off all their hargabushes and the ships that were in the port shot off all their artilerie and on the shore a great noise of droms and bels all the which being ended and done the Spaniards went a shore againe vnto their lodging but first the Insuanto was departed vnto his owne house with all the company that hee brought with him The next day the sayd Insuanto did inuite them vnto a banket which was as famous as any which had bene made them vnto that time He was at the banquet himselfe and the Captaine generall of all that prouince There was aboundance of meates and many pretie deuises to passe away the time which made the banquet to indure more then foure houres the which being done there was brought forth the present which the Insuanto did sende vnto the gouernor of Manilla in returne of that which was sent to him The present was fourtéene pieces of silke for the gouernor of Manilla and tenne péeces for the generall of the field hee also commanded to be giuen vnto the Friers each of them foure péeces and vnto the souldiers each of them two péeces and vnto their seruants and slaues certaine painted mantels and there with he tooke his leaue of them very friendly and gaue vnto them letters the which hee had wrote vnto the gouernor vnto the general of the field answere vnto those the which they had wrote vnto him said that all things necessarie for their departure was in a redinesse with victuals for ten monethes put a bord their ships so that when as winde and wether did serue they might depart Also that if in their voyage it should so fall out that any of the Chinos that went in their shippes shoulde do vnto them any euill either abr●de or at the Ilands that the gouernor therof should punish them at his pleasure and how that the vizroy will thinke well thereof in conclusion he saide vnto them that hee hoped to sée them there againe verie shortly and to returne againe with Limahon and then hee woulde supplie the wantes which nowe they lacked The Spaniards did kisse his hands and said that they had receiued in curtesie more then they deserued that in all thinges there did abound and not lacke that they remained greatly indetted vnto him for their friendship and would giue their king notice thereof that whensoeuer occasion shoulde bee offered to repay them with the like and therewith the Insuanto departed to his owne house leauing in the companie of the Spaniards fiue captaines those which should go with them in their company to sea and also Omoncon and Sinsay who were that day in the banquet with the habite and ensigne of Loytias for that the day before it was giuen vnto them by the Insuanto Upon Wednesday which was the fourtéenth of September the wind came faire wherewith they hoised vp their sailes and went to sea at their departure there was at the waters side the Insuanto and the Iustice of Chincheo to sée them saile the which Insuanto had conceiued so great loue and friendship of the Castillas that when he saw them depart he shedde great aboundance of teares as was affirmed by diuers Chinos that saw it to which the Spaniards gaue credite vnto for that they knew him to be a maruellous louing person and humaine of a good condition and of a gallant personage and did excéede all other that they had séene in all the time of their being in that prouince CHAP. XXX The Spaniardes departe from the port of Tansuso towards the Ilandes Philippinas and euery day they doo harbor themselues in Ilands by the way declaring what they saw in them BEing departed out of the port as aforsaide the Spaniards deuided themselues into two shippes to wit the two Friers and Michael de Loarcha Omoncon and thrée other captaines in one shippp And Peter Sarmiento Nicholas de Quenca and Iohn de Triana Sinsay and all their souldiers in another ship with eight other ships of warre which went with them for their safegard they sailed forwards directing their course towards a small Iland that was not farre off with determination there to take water for their ships for that it had in it many riuers of very swéete water Within a smal space they ariued there and it had a very faire and sure port wherein might ride in securitie a great Nauy of ships All Thursday they were there recreating and sporting themselues for that it was a pleasant Ilande and full of fresh riuers Uppon Friday being the sixtéenth of September the day being somwhat spēt they made saile and tooke port foure leagues from
that hee was entred into the spanish ship saw the friers the rest that were in their cōpanie saw that their apparell spéech was strange vnto him he asked of them what they were and from whence they came whether they went and when y e he vnderstood y t they were Castillos of the Ilands Philippinas came frō the said Ilands were bound vnto China with intent to preach the holy gospell he asked thē whose licence they had to conduct them vnto the firme lande But when he vnderstood that they had none hee asked them howe they passed and escaped the fléete of ships that was in the straight aforesayde The Spaniards answered that they found no impediment nor let So he being greatlie amazed as well of the one as of the other entred into his owne boate and with great furie departed from their shippe and went into his owne but at his departure the Spaniards did request him that he would conduct them vnto the cittie who gaue them to vnderstande by signes that he woulde although he feared the rigorous punishment that in that kingdome is executed vppon all such as doo bring into the same any man of a strange nation as hath béene tolde you in the first part of this historie So hee fearing that if hée shoulde enter with him into the port the fault would be imputed vnto him therefore at such time as hee came within halfe a league of the riuers mouth he cast about his shippe and sailed to sea and went so farre that in a short time the Spaniards had lost the sight of them who when they saw that they had no guide they followed the course of another shippe that they had discouered before the other did cast about to sea for which occasion the other two ships that wee spake off before were departed So a little before the sunne-set they discouered the mouth and entrie of a great and mightie brode riuer out of the which came two great streames or armes and in them many ships entering in and going forth and considering how they had the winde which serued them well they entered into the same but when they had sailed forwards a quarter of a league they discouered so great a multitude of barkes that it seemed vnto them a groue or some inhabited place and as wee drewe nigh vnto them they not knowing our shippe all began to flie and run away with so great noise as though they should haue béene all set on fire or smoke in that place The Spaniards séeing that they were the occasion of this feare amongst them they withdrew themselues into the middest of the riuer whereas they strooke saile and came to an anker there they did ride all that night and it was in such a place that none of al the other barks and boates came nigh them by a great way The next day following which was sunday the one twentith day of Iune they weighed anker and went vnder their foresaile vp that arme of the riuer the which within a little while they had sailed did ioine with the other arme aforesaide and was in that place of so great widenesse that it séemed to bée a sea there sailed in and out many shippes barkes and boates of whome the Spaniards demaunded how farre the port was off from that place but they answered nothing at all but with great laughter and wonder to sée the Spaniards and their kind of attyre they departed But when they had sailed two leagues vp the riuer they discouered a high towre and very faire vnder the which were at an anker a great number of shippes thither they sailed right on So when as they came right ouer against the towre they saw on shore a great mighty crane to discharge merchandize withall whereat lay many ships but when they came to the point fearing that some ordinance would be shot at them they strooke all their sailes according vnto the vse custome in y e ports of Spaine They after a while that they had remained in that sort saw that neither the towre nor y e ships did make any motion towards them they turned and hoised vp againe their sailes and went wheras al the ships were when they came amongst them they let fall their anker wheras they did ride looking when they would come to demand of them any thing CHAP. III. The Friers and their companions came vnto the Cittie of Canton they went on shore and praised God for that it had pleased him to let thē see their desire fulfilled There comes a Iustice to visite them and hath with them great communication THe Spaniards séeing that they were there at an anker a good while that there was none that came vnto them to demand any questiō they hoised out their boate went in it on shore wheras they al knéeled downe vpon their knées and with great deuotion did say Te Deum laudamus giuing thankes to God for that he had so myraculously brought them into y e kingdome of China of them so much desired without any Pilot or other humane industrie the which being doone they began to walke along by the crane aforesaid nigh vnto the which were certaine houses whereas were kept ropes and tackling belonging vnto the shippes so they procéeded forwards with intent to séeke the gates of the Citie the which after they had gone the space of foure hargabus shot they found the gate which was verie great and sumptuous of a strong and gallant edifice The people of the country séeing them at their comming a shore how they did knéele downe and how that their manner of attire was different from the people of the same not knowing from whence they did come did cause in them great admiration and to ioyne togither a great troope of people and followed them with great desire to sée the end of their enterprise This great multitude of people was the occasion that they entred in at the gates of the Cittie without being discouered of the guards ports that were put there for that purpose neither were they disturbed of the entry by reason of the great throng of people and strangenesse of the matter So after they had gone a while in the stréete the people increasing more and more to sée them they staied in the porch of a great house there where as the iustices of the sea or water bailies do kéepe their courts of audience and in the meane time that they remained there which was a pretty while the guardes of the gate vnderstood that amongst y e presse throng of the people did enter certaine strangers contrary to the precept giuen them vpon great penalties they straightway with great feare that their ouersight should be discouered ran laid hands vpon y e Spaniards carried them backe againe put them out of the gate of the citie without doing any euil or harme vnto their persons willed them to stay
sure port although with great trouble and with so great a leake that they could scarce kéepe her aboue water but in especiall that which came in their safe conduct And afterwarde they vnderstood that the other ship had taken port fiftie leagues from that place with the like perill and danger In this port they remained certaine dayes trimming their ships and tarrying for a faire winde So they departed from thence the thrée and twentie day of Ianuarie and to their iudgementes with a setled and good winde with the which they sayled fiue dayes in the end wherof they discouered the Iland of Luzon with a singular ioy vnto them all for the which the Spaniards gaue thankes vnto God by whose fauour they had escaped the storme past But it so fell out as they were going alongest the coast of the Iland for to enter into the port of Manilla and being within fiue leagues of the entrie thereof vpon a soddaine there arose the north wind with so great furie and caused so great a sea that they found themselues in a great deale more danger than in the other storme past in such sort that they sponed before the winde with their foresayle halfe mast hie shaking it selfe all to péeces and in euerie minute of an houre readie to be drowned The Chinos for that they are superstitious and witches beganne to inuocate and call vpon the diuell for to bring them out of that trouble which is a thing commonly vsed amongest them at all times when they finde themselues in the like perplexitie also they doo request of him to showe them what they should doo to bring themselues out of trouble But when the Spaniards vnderstoode their dealinges they did disturbe them that they shoulde not perseuer in their lottes and inuocations and beganne to coniure the diuelles which was the occasion that they would not answere vnto the inuocation of the Chinos who did call them after diuerse manners as hath béene declared in the first part of this historie yet they heard a diuell saye that they should not blame them because they did not answere vnto their demaunde for they could not doo it for that they were disturbed by the coniuration of those sp●nish Fathers which they carried with them in their shippe So presently when the night was come God was so pleased that the storme ceased and became in fewe houres very calme although it indured but a while for as they beganne to set sayle to nauigate towardes the port and almost at the point to enter into the same a newe storme seised on them and with so great force that they were constrayned to returne vnto the sea for feare to be broken in péeces vpon the shore At this time they wanted both water and victualles which was vnto them a newe torment they were brought into so great extremitie that for ninetie and sixe persons that were in the shippe there was not left victuals for two dayes The Chinos beganne a newe to inuocate the diuels by writing which is a way that they neuer let but doo answere them as they did at this instant and were not disturbed by the coniurations of the fathers yet notwithstanding they lyed in their answere for that they saide that within thrée dayes they should be within the citie of Manilla and after it was more then four dayes In conclusion hauing by the fauour of almightie God ouercome all their trauayles by the sea and the necessitie of the lacke of water and victualles they ariued at the desired port the second day of Februarie Anno 1580. whereas they were receiued by the gouernour and of all the rest with great ioy in pardoning them the offence they had committed in going without licence and showed vnto them particular fauours were very sorrowfull that the father Costodio and his companions remained in Machao for that hee was welbeloued of all and that with great desert for his vnderstanding learning holy life Who within fewe dayes after did write a letter vnto the rest of the religious men in Manilla aduertising them how that in a short time they came vnto Machao in good health how that the bishoppe and the Captaine generall with all the rest of the towne were verie glad and ioyfull of their comming and fully resolued to the contrarie of the false opinion that they had conceiued of them and that he was in g●●at hope to sée his desire accomplished for that he was daily in place wheras they did sée comon with the Chinos whom so soone as he can speake y e language he doth pretend to instruct them in ma●ters touching the faith Also he wrote that he vnderstood by good originall or information although it was cōmitted in secret that the kingdom or prouince of Cochin China which is four daies iourney from Machao whereas the Portingals hath contraction and port for all their ships that come from the Indias hath sent vnto the bishop of Machao doth demand of him priests for to baptise them with such determination good will to be christians that in some portes they haue alreadie timber cut downe for to edifie churches This you may beléeue for that the bishop himselfe hath tolde him and in the latter end of his letter was written as foloweth They haue inuited me to this enterprise and for to put my selfe therein I would gladly haue with me many companions which is the treasure that we go to séeke It is a firme lande there whereas God hath prepared a great haruest Th●y are politike people and more easie to be conuerted then the Chinos for that the diuell hath not put so manie disturbances against the gospell of Christ as in China although it doth ioyne vpon it and once entring the faith therein with the fauour of God their great difficult doings which now they haue among them will be broken with great ease for they are not so many nor so great whereby wee should be discomforted to sée thē ouercome and principally they being men of so good wisedome and vnderstanding as we haue séene by experience in the time that we haue béene amongest them and so full of mercie and pitie that although wee entred into the lande without licence and for dooing of the same wee ranne in great daunger of our owne liues they did intreat vs well and gaue vs all that was néedefull and also did suffer vs to preach if we could the language the which with the fauour of God we will quickly learne for that we are whereas continually we doo common and talke with the Chinos wee doo verie earnestly commit it vnto our Lord to direct and guide the same that his holy name may bee exalted and the soules of these blinde Gentiles may knowe and beléeue and beléeuing may be saued This was the substance of the letter with the which it séemeth vnto vnto me great reason to conclude this second relation And to begin the third the which I
do beléeue will be pleasant to the reader and is intituled A Commentarie of the new world in the which is contayned many curious matters as you shall perceiue after the reading thereof and is declared in substance and effect by the relation of the father that did passe and sée them all who was named fryer Martin Ignacio a religious man of the order of S. Francis who after that he had compassed the whole worlde came hither to Rome with Martin Simion bishop of the Iland of Pepper in the orientall or east Indias with whom I haue had communication diuers times and is a Chalde borne and of the citie of Niniuie in Babylon and made bishop by the patriarke of Babylon The end of this booke A Commentarie or short discourse of all such notable thinges as be betwixt Spaine till you come vnto the kingdome of China and from China vnto Spaine returning by the Orientall or east Indias after that they had almost compassed the whole world Wherein is contayned all the rites ceremonies and customes of the people the riches fertilitie and strength of many kingdomes and the description of them Made and set forth by the Author of this book as well by that which he hath seene as also by true relation that he had of the religious and barefoot Fryers of the order of Saint Francis who trauailed the same the yeare 1584. CHAP. I. A Commentarie of the new world SAint Lucas de Barrameda and the Citie of Cadiz from whence ordinarily goeth foorth all such fléetes and shippes that go vnto the occident or west Indias are distant the one from the other onely fiue leagues and in thirtie seuen degrées of altitude from whence vnto the Ilandes called the Canarias is two hundred and thirtie leagues and alwayes doo Rut to the southwest and is ordinarily sailed in eight or ten dayes The seas are rough which causeth great waues for which cause it is called the gulfe of the Ieguas These Ilands which in ancient time were called Fortunadas are at this day called by the Spaniards y e Canarias which is deriued of Canes or dogs for that there was in them at such time as the Spaniardes did discouer them great quantitie of dogges very bigge fierce and braue There are of them seuen Ilands which are called Gran Canaria Tenerife Palma Gomera Yerro Lancarote and Forte Ventura and are in altitude twentie eight degrees lacking very little and haue in them many particular thinges of which I will declare some of them in briefe In the Iland of Tenerife at the farther part therof towards the north west there is a mountain called El Pico de Tereyra which vnto the iudgement of thē who haue séene it is the highest in all the worlde and is plainely seene before you come to it thrée score leagues so that a ship going from Spaine vnto those Ilandes doth discouer that mountaine first None can ascende or go vp that mountaine but in the moneths of Iuly August for that all other moneths of the yeare there is very much snow on it although in all those Ilandes it doth neuer snowe and to mount the height thereof is three daies worke on the top of the same there is a round plaine place and being thereon at such tune as it is faire weather and the seas calme and in quiet you may sée all the seuen Ilands and euerie one of them will séeme but a small thing in respect yet some of them are distant from that more than fiftie leagues it hath as much more in cōpasse as that In the two monethes aforesaid they do gather in the toppe thereof all the brimstone that is brought from that Iland vnto Spaine which is much in quantitie This mountaine belongeth to the duke of Maqueda by particular gift of the king In one of these seuē Ilands aforesaid called the Hierco there is a continuall woonder which in my iudgement is one of the greatest in all the worlde and worthie to be knowen amongest all mē wherby they may exalt the mightie prouidence of God and giue him thankes for the same This Iland being the greatest amongest the seuen is a countrie very asper and vnfruitfull and so drie that there is no water to be found in all the Iland but on the sea side and that in fewe places but very farre distant from the inhabitance of that Ilande But there naturall necessitie is remedied by the diuine prouidence of heauen as aforesaide and by a strange meanes which is there is a great and mightie trée vnknowen and the like hath not beene seene in any part of all the whole world whose leaues are narrowe and long and are continually gréene like Iuie vpon the which trée is séene continually a small cloud which neuer augmenteth nor diminisheth with the occasion that the leaues continually without ceasing doth distill drops of water very cleere and fine which doth fall into certaine ses●ernes which the inhabitantes of the townes haue made for the conseruation thereof to remedie their necessities and to sustaine thereby not onely themselues but also their cattell and beastes and is sufficient for them all yet doo they not knowe the originall and beginning of this continuall and strange miracle One hundreth leagues distant from these Ilandes towards the right hand there is an other thing of little lesse admiration then the other y t we haue spoken of which is that many times there is séen an Iland which they cal S. Borandon Many being lost at the sea haue chaunced vpon the same Iland do say that it is a very fresh and gallant Iland with great abundance of trées and sustinence inhabited with Christian people yet can they not say of what nation or language The Spaniards many times haue gone with intent to séeke it but neuer could finde it which is y e occasion that there be diuers opinions touching the same Some doo say that it is an inchanted Iland and is seene but certaine daies assigned or appointed others say that there is no other let or impediment for the finding therof but because it is so little and is continually couered with great cloudes that there runneth from it riuers which haue so great a current that it maketh it difficult to come vnto it My opinion is if it be any thing worth y t being true that which so many haue spoken of this Iland according vnto the common opinion which they haue in all the seuen Ilands of Canaria it can not be without some great mysterie for he which can cause it to be all in a cloud the swift current of the riuers to be an impediment to the finding therof can find remedie for the inhabitants to come forth if it be so for them y t be without at the sea not to go into it yet can it not be for thē within the Iland but at some time there should haue some come soorth by
neighbors with as much prouision and as well gouerned Fiftéene leagues from this prouince trauelling cōtinually towards y e northwest they came to a great towne called Acoma it had in it more than sixe thousande soules it was situated and placed vpon a high rock the which was more than fiftie fadam in height and had no other entry but by a payre of staires the which was made cut out of the same rocke a thing the which did cause great admiration vnto the Spaniardes all the water that they had in this towne was in cesterns The principallest hereof came with peace for to sée the Spaniards brought thē many mantles and shamwayes very well dressed and great quantitie of prouision they haue their corne fields two leagues from that place and for to water them they take water out of a small riuer there harde by Upon the saide riuer side they sawe many fields with roses like vnto those that are in Spain there are many mountaines which shewe to haue mettals although they went not vp to sée it for that the Indians be many very warrelike people The Spaniards remained in this place thrée daies in one of the which the naturall people thereof did make vnto them a solemne dance came foorth in the same with gallant apparell and with maruellous ingenious pastimes with the which they reioyced excéedingly So four twentie leagues from this place they came vnto a prouince called in their naturall language Zuny and the Spaniards do call it Cibola there is in it a great number of Indians In the which was Francisco Vazquez Coronado and left there erected many crosses and many other signes and tokens of christendome which continually did remaine standing They found there three christened Indians which were left there at that time whose names were Andres de Cuyoacon Gasper de Mexico and Antonio de Guadalaiara who had almost forgotten their own language could speake very well that of this countrie yet with a little vse after they had talked with thē they did easily vnderstand them Of these they vnderstood that thrée score iourneyes from thence was there a lake very great about the which was situated many excellent good townes that the natural people thereof had very much gold it séemed to be true for that they did all weare braslets eareringes of the same The foresaide Francisco Vazques Coronado hauing certaine intelligence of the same he departed from this prouince of Cibola went that way and hauing trauelled twelue iourneyes his water did faile him so y t he determined to returne backe againe as he did with pretence to returne an other time whē better oportunity should be had the which afterwards he did not put in executiō for that by death all his determinations pretēces were cut off CHAP. X. Still doth he prosecute the discouery of the new Mexico VPon the newes of this great riches aforesaide the sayde captaine Antonio de Espeio determined to go thether where were of his opiniō the most part of his cōpanions but y e religious fryer was of the contrarie opinion sayd that it was high time to returne vnto new Bizcaya frō whence they came for to giue notice of all that they had séene the which they did put in execution within few daies after the most part of them and left the captain with alonely nine companions that would follow him Who after that hee had fully certified himselfe of the riches aboue said and of the great quantitie of good metals that were there He departed out of this prouince with his companions and trauelled towardes the northwest So after that they had trauelled eight and twentie leagues they came into an other prouince the which was very great in the which to their iudgmēt were more thā fifty thousand soules whose inhabitants when they vnderstood of their cōming they sent thē a messenger which said y t if they would not be slaine of them y t they should not approch any nearer vnto their townes Unto the which the said captaine answered that they came not thether to do them any harme as they should well perceiue and also did request them that they would not disturbe them in the prosecuting of their pretence and gaue vnto the messenger certaine things such as they carryed with them who did praise so much the Spaniards that he did appease the troubled minds of the Indians in such sort that they did of their owne good wil grant them licence for to enter into their townes The which they did with one hundreth and fiftie Indians their friends of the Prouince of Cibola aforesaide and with the thrée Indians of Mexico of whom we made mention Before they came vnto the first towne by a league there went foorth to méete and receiue the Spaniards more than two thousande Indians laden with victualles and prouision vnto whome our Captaine did giue thinges of small price yet it seemed vnto them to be of great estimation more than golde So when they came nigher vnto the towne called Zaguato there came foorth to receiue them a great number of Indians and amongest them their Caciques and made a great showe of mirth and ioy and threw vppon the ground much flower of Maiz that their horse might tread vpon it With these feastes ioy and pleasure they entred into the towne whereas they were very well receiued lodged and made much of the which the captaine did partly recompence in giuing vnto all the principallest amongest them hattes and glasse beades and many other thinges more which they carried with them to serue the like oportunitie The Caciques did foorthwith dispatch and send aduice vnto all those of that prouince giuing them to vnderstande of the comming of their new guestes and how that they were verie curteous men did no harme Which was occasion sufficient to cause them all to come laden with presentes vnto the Spaniardes and did request them for to goe vnto their townes to sport and recreate themselues the which they did but alwaies with great care and respect of what so euer might happen For the which t●e captaine did vse a policie with them which was that he tolde vnto the Caciques that for so much as his horse were verie fierce and furious and that they had told them that they would kill them therefore for to shunne the damage and harme that might happen vnto the Indians it were requisite to make a fort with lyme and stone to put them in The Caciques did giue such credite vnto his words that in a few houres they had ioyned together so much people that they made a fort according as the Spaniardes did request that with an incredible breuitie Besides this when the captaine sayd y t he would depart they brought vnto him a present of fortie thousand mātles of cotton some white and some painted and a great quantitie of hand towels with tassels at the corners and many other thinges and amongst them
and would be better if that they were holpen with good ensamples as those which haue béene there so long time are bounde to doe that the lacke thereof doth cause some of the inhabitantes so much to abhorre them that they would not sée them once paynted vpon a wall For proofe whereof and for to moue such as haue power and authoritie to put remedie in the same I will declare vnto you here a strange case the which Royally did passe of a trueth in one of these Ilandes and is verie well knowne amongst them that is there chanced to die an Ilander a principall man amongst them a few dayes after that he was baptised being very contrite for his sinnes the which hee had done against God before he was baptised and after hee died So after by the deuine permission of God he appeared vnto many of that Ilands whom he did perswade forthwith to receiue the baptisme with reasons of great efficacie and declared vnto them as one that had experienced the same the rewarde of that good déede which without all doubt shoulde bee giuen vnto them if they would receiue the same and liue after conformable and according vnto the commandements of Christ for the which he told them and said that forthwith so soone as he was dead he was carried by the Angels into glorie there whereas all things were of delite pleasure and content and did communicate onely in the sight of God and that there was none that entred therein neither coulde enter except hee were baptised according vnto the preaching of the Spaniards of whome and of others that were like vnto them there was an infinite number Therefore if so be that they would go and inioy of those benefites and delights it is necessarie that first they should be baptised and afterwards to obserue and kéepe the commandements that be preached vnto them by the fathers that are amongst the Castillas and therewith he vanished away and they remained treating amongst themselues concerning that which they had hearde and was the occasion that some of them forthwith receiued the baptisme and that others did delay it saying that because there were Spaniard souldiers in glory they would not go thither because they would not be in their company All this hurt is done by one peruerse or impious man and with one euill ensample the which amongst many good as you haue in those parts but in especiall amongst them in particular it ought to bée reprehended and punished seuéerely with rigour These Ilands at the first discouery of them had the fame to bée Mal Sanos or vnholesome but since experience hath shewed and prooued it to the contrarie It is a countrie maruellous fertill and yeeldeth very much Rice wheate goates hennes deere buffes kine and great stoare of hogges whose flesh is so sauorie as the mutton they haue in Spaine there be also manie cattes that yeelde siuet great stoare of fruites which be very good and sauorie great aboundance of Honie and fish and all solde at so small a price that almost it is solde for nothing Also there is great stoare of Synamom but no Oile of Oliues but that which is carried thither out of the Nuoua Espania they haue much Oyle of Algongoli and of Flaxe s●ede the which they doo spende ordinarily in that countrie so that the Oyle of Oliues is not missed with them There is great stoare of Cloues Saffron Pepper Nutmegges and many other drugges great stoare of cotton and silke of all colours the which is brought vnto them by merchants of China euerie yeare a great quantitie from whence commeth more then twenty shippes laden with péeces of silkes of all colours and with earthen vessell powder saltpeter Iron stéele and much quicke-siluer brasse copper wheate flower walnuts bisket dates linnen cloth counting chestes very gallantly wrought calles of networke Buratos Espumillas basens and ewres made of tinne parchment lace silke fringe and also of golde the which is spunne and twisted after a fashion neuer s●ene in all Christendome and manie other thinges of great curiositie and all this aforesaide is solde verie good cheape Likewise such things as the Ilands do yéelde are sold very good cheape for you shall haue foure roues of wine which commeth of the Palme trée for foure rials of plate the which for lacke of that made of grapes is very good twelue haneges of Rice for eight rials of plate three hennes for one rial a whole hogge for eightéene rials a whole buffe for foure rials a deere for t●o rials and yet it must be both great and good fo●re roues of suger for sixe rials a ●otiia of Oile made of Algongoli for thrée rials two baskets of saffron for two rials sixe pounds of pepper or cloues for one riall two hundred nutmegs for one rial a roue of synamum sixe for rials a kintal of iron or stéele for tenne rials thirtie dishes of very fine earth foure rials and all other things after this rate But amongst all other notable thinges that these Spaniards haue séene in those Ilands and in the kingdome of China and other places whereas they passed there is one thing which hath caused them most to maruel at and to haue it most in memory which is a trée ordinarily called Palma de Cocos but doth differ from that which beareth the dates and with great reason for that it is a plant so full of mysterie and profite that there hath come a ship vnto these Ilands and the said ship and all that was in her to be sold with ropes cords masts sailes and nailes were made of this trée and the merchandice that she brought was mantels made of the rind of the saide trée with great subtiltie and fine works Likewise all the victuals that was in the said ship for the sustentation of thirtie mē that came in her yea their water was of the same trée The merchants that came in this ship did certifie of a truth in all the Iland of Maldiuia from whence they came they haue no other sustainment but onely that which this tree yeeldeth they do make houses hereof and tyles for to couer the same the fruit doth yéeld a Meollio or curnell which is very sauory and healthfull the sauor thereof is much like to gréene hasell nuts and if you do cut the branch there whereas the Coco commeth forth is the principall fruite and euery one of them hath ordinarily a pinte of water the which is very swéet delicate al the said substance doth returne into the trunke of the tree whereas they doo bore a hole and thereat they do draw out all that water which is much and mingling it with other thinges they make thereof good wine the which is drunk in al those Ilands and in the kingdome of China Of the same water they make vineger and of the Meollio kernell aforesaid oile verie medicinall milke like vnto Almon milke hony and suger very sauorie These and many other
guarde them in the which they sawe so manie curious thinges and of so great riches that they iudged it to bée the best countrie in all the world So when they came vnto the citty with so small trouble and werinesse by reason of their long iourney and euill intreatings by the souldiers they were presently carried as might be sayde from Herode to Pylate and escaped not one day but they were carried to the publike audience or else before some particular Iudge This citie was very fresh both within and without and full of many orchards whereas were an infinite number of fruite with gardens stanges of water and other thinges of great recreation This citie is thrée times so bigge as Siuell and compassed about with a mightie strong wall their houses are very great and well wrought their stréetes are excéeding faire brode and long and so straight that from the one end vnto the other they may sée a man In equall distance the one from the other there are built many triumphall arkes which is an ordinarie and common thing vsed in the cities of that kingdome vpon their gates there are little towers wheron is planted all the artilerie that they haue for the defence of the citie as hath béen said all the which is inuironed and compassed about with a riuer which is great and faire on the which is ordinarily sayling an infinite number of barkes and brigandines and is of so great depth they may come lye harde vnto the wall yea ships of great burden On the one side of the citie there is a little Iland of great recreation vnto the which they do passe by a very faire bridge the one halfe made of stone and the other of timber and is of so great a length that on the part that is made of stone the father fryer Ignacio did tell thirtie Innes or victualing houses wheras was to be bought not only flesh and fish but also great store of marchandice of great estimation and valure as amber musk e péeces of silke and cloth of golde CHAP. XVI The Spaniardes are sent vnto the citie of Hucheofu doo declare what happened there vnto them FRom the citie of Saucheofu they were sent vnto Hucheofu the which is more principall and great than the first alwayes hauing with them in companie and garde the number of souldiers aforesaid sometimes they trauailed by lande and sometimes by water whereas they saw so many rich thinges which in respect to them all that they had séene vnto that time was nothing Of the which although I haue had particular relation of many of them I leaue off heere the declaring thereof for that of an Itinerario or commentarie I will not make a historie But principally for that many of them doo séeme to be incredible and will be more vnto those that haue not had any notice of the mightinesse of this kingdome In the discourse of this their iourney the cities and townes they sawe were many and verie bigge and all compassed with strong walles and at one of them there was a mightie riuer on the which was edified more than fiue hundreth engynes or whéeles and they were made with so much art that alonely with the violence of the streame of the riuer that dooth force them they water all the groundes there abouts for the space of two leagues and more without any other helpe or humaine force In this citie they were certaine daies in visiting and complementes after the which they were commaunded to goe vnto Canton of the which in the two relations before is made particular mention So when they came vnto the Citie they were carried vnto the prison of the Thequixi which is whereas are put such as are condemned to die the which they plainely perceiued There they remayned verie manie dayes and the most part of them were carried vnto the tribunall seate of the Iudges in companie with others that were condemned to die At this time there was in the citie the Tutan who was the viceroye of the prouince and the Chacu who is the generall visitor and that was at such time as was doone great Iustice for to cleare the prisons whereas were thousandes of men and some that had béene there more than tenne yeares There was some day at that time that in the presence of our people were brought foorth to be iudged two thousand prisoners some to the death and others to be whipped and other to be banished with other kinde of penalties according vnto the disposition rigor of their lawes That day wherein they make capitall audience they vse particular ceremonies as shooting of certaine péeces of artilerie and to shut the gates of the citie not permitting anie to enter in neither go foorth till such time as that act and Iustice be finished and many other things as hath béene declared in the first part of this historie The Spaniards being in the citie at this time of so great calamitie it so fell out that the same time there was a gentleman of Portingall called Arias Gonsalo de Miranda chiefe captaine of the citie of Machao very deuout vnto religious men and a friende vnto Spaniardes who vnderstanding the great trouble and danger wherein they were hee tooke order by all meanes possible to set them at libertie and had so great care therein that hee went through with his intent in such sort that they were deliuered out of pryson and from the great feare in which they were and all by the intercession of this gentleman who did vse so good persuasions for the loue he did bears vnto them that he made voyde the euill opinion they had against them and with compulsion to reuoke the rigorous sentence of death pronounced against them I do not here in particular treate of such thinges as happened vnto these religious men the seruants of God as well in the prison as on their iourney for that they were many and to declare them is requisite a long time and to make a new historie And although in the bookes before haue béen declared the riches of that kingdome and all thinges in particular yet for the better certification I thought it good and not without purpose to declare in the chapter following some of th●se which the father fryer Martin Ignatio did communicate with me vsing in the treating thereof so much breuitie that it shall séeme rather an Epilogo then a new relation And for a more verification of the truth whereby better credite may be giuen thervnto séeing that the persons who did sée it doo agrée in that which shall be here declared and againe for that the saide father and his companions did sée more thinges than the others whose relations be alreadie set downe The occasion wherefore they put confidence in them and to let them sée and vnderstand many secretes was for that they were sentenced and condemned to die for without all doubt if they had vnderstood that they should haue returned out of
possible they do procure the same the which is not followed for lacke of ministers as aforesaid and is no smal griefe vnto them that Christianly doo put themselues to consider how the diuel our aduersary doth carry vnto his infernal mansion those soules which séeme to bee well disposed for to inioy the benefite of God and his eternal goodnesse all the which is for lacke of ministers and not for any other default God remedie the same for his mercies sake The said father Ignacio whom as I haue said I do follow in many things of this Itinerario did tell me that as he passed by this kingdome for to go vnto Spaine he saw the deuotion of the people thereof and the great desire they had to bee Christians and how that the people were ready and bent for to receiue the holy Gospell very humble and of good vnderstanding Hee would haue tarried for to baptise them and would haue done it onely for charity and compassion séeing with what deuotion they did demand the same and the great number of soules that were condemned but hee was constrained by force to go vnto Malaca and againe it séemed vnto him that amongst so many people his smal force might do little good and that it were better for him to go vnto Spaine and to procure more companions to helpe him as he did and returned with them and with many other rewards of Pope Gregory the thirtéenth receiued and he also receiued great fauours of the king of Spaine and with great hope that his maiestie will giue his particular aide for to go thorow with this enterprise which will not be of small effect I do beléeue of a truth that in small time all that kingdome shall bee subiect vnto the Catholike saith of Rome and to be the gate whereby to enter the lawe of the Gospel into the mightie kingdome of China for that this of Cochinchina is vpon the same firme land and their language and customes are almost in one manner They are verie white people of this kingdome and are apparelled like vnto those of China their women are verie honest and shamefast and their apparell is very curius and gallant The men weare their haire dispersed and doo combe and trim it with too much care In all the countrie almost all of them are apparelled in silke for that they haue there verie much and excellent good the countrie is verie holesome and full of old folkes and children which is a sufficient proofe for the goodnesse thereof They say that they neuer had amongst them neither pestilence nor hunger which is the like as we haue said of the kingdome of China Let him that can do it in such sort that so great and infinite a number of soules that at this day are vnder the tyranny of the diuell may see them in the Christian libertie and in the other life inioy their creator CHAP. XXI In this chapter is declared of such kingdomes as are adioyning vnto that of Cochinchina and of some notable thinges in them with the rites and customes of the inhabitants NIgh vnto this kingdome of Cochinchina there is another called Champa that although it be poore of gold and siluer yet is it very rich of drugges and gallant wood and great stoare of prouision This kingdome is very great and full of people they somewhat whiter then those of Cochinchina they are as nigh as willing to become Christians as their neighbors but for the performance thereof they doo lacke that which the other doo They haue the same lawes and ceremonies as well the one as the other and are all Idolaters and doo worship the second causes in the same order as the Chinos do vnto whom likewise they do make one manner of acknowledging From this Iland you may go with ease vnto Malaca leauing on the right hand a kingdome which is called Camboia the which is great very full of people and all of them affectioned to go to sea and nauigation by reason whereof they haue an infinite number of vessels It is a very fertill country with great stoare of prouision there are Elephants in great number Abadas which is a kind of beast so big as two great buls and hath vppon his snowt a little horne At this day there is one of them at Madrid the which was brought out of the Indians to his maiesty and many do go to sée it for a strange thing and neuer the like séene in Europe whose skinne is so hard according vnto the report that no man although he be of great force and strength can passe it with a thrust Some haue saide that it is an Unicorne but I take it for the contrarie and they are of my opinion almost all those that haue béene in those partes and haue séene the true Unicorne In this kingdome there is a religious man of the order of S. Dominicke called frier Siluester whome God did carrie into those parts for to remedy the soules that are therein hee dooth imploy himselfe to learne their naturall language and to preach the holy gospell in the same tongue and hath them likewise prepared that if he had any companions for to help hym they should obtayne much fruite for the heauens he hath sent and requested for some vnto the India of Portingall but they would neuer send him anie peraduenture by some sinister information by men which the diuell doth marke as instruments for to stay and let the saluation of those soules for euer to remayne in his tirannicall power This fryer did write a letter vnto Malaca vnto fryer Martin Ignacio and vnto o●her religious men intirely requesting them for the loue of God to giue such order that hee might be holpen with some religious men of what order soeuer with certification that therein they shall doe great seruice vnto God and put remedie in those soules whome he dare not baptise for feare that after lacking the euangelical refreshing to water and cherish them they returne to bring forth that euill fruit of Idolatrie This petition did not take effect according to his desire for y t there was not to serue his turne nor any that was vnoccupied They vnderstood of him that brought this letter that the king of that kingdome had in great veneration the sayd father Siluestro in so ample manner as was the patriarck Ioseph in Egipt hee had in all that kingdome the seconde place and euery time that the king would speak with him he gaue him a chaire and gaue him great priuiledges and licence for to preach the holy gospell throughout all the kingdome without any contradiction and for to edifie the churches and all other thinges whatsoeuer he thought necessarie this king himselfe helping thereunto by giuing of great gifts and charitie He said also that in al y e kingdome there were erected many crosses and were had in great reuerence And for y e confirmation of the truth hereof the
So that after the aforesaid father frier Martin Ignacio had made his account of all that he had trauelled from the time he departed from Siuel til he returned vnto Lysborne in compassing the world he found that it was nine thousand and forty leagues by sea by lande besides many other leagues that he trauelled in China and in other parts of the which hee dooth make no account All these leagues are full of mightie kingdomes and al or the most part of them are subiect vnto the tyranny of lucyfer God for his infinite mercy conuert them and take pittie on them as hee did when that he came from heauen vppon the earth to die for all put into the heart of the king of Spaine that amongst other good workes the which with his most Christian zeale dooth intend and do for to procure this which will bee so much vnto the glory of God and great desert of honor vnto himselfe the which he may do very commodiously being as he is at this day Lord of all the Indies and of the biggest part of all that newe world This petition is worthy that all we Christians doo desire of God for that his holy name in all the world may be praised and exalted and the sonnes of Adam who for their sinnes are so dispersed and forgotten of God and first beginning they may go and inioy the happy and glorious kingdome for the which they were created FINIS Excellent ●lummes Excellent white sugar good cheape Honie wax Excellent good silke Great store of flaxe and hempe Cottō wool wheat and barlie rie oates Great abundance of rice Chestnuts All kind of beasts Excellent furres Muske Great store of buffes Deere hogs and goates Great store of wildfoule Foule so●de by waight A penie Reubarbe and other medicinall hearbs Foure hundred of Nutmegs for sixe pence Cloues sixe pound for 3 pence the like of pepper Sinamom 25. pound for two shilings Mines of gold and siluer other mettals Iron and steele 4. shilling a quintal Siluer is more worth then gold Great store of pearles 243. kings The mightie city of Causie The China is in compas 3000. leagues and 1800. ●eagues long The mightie citie called Suntien or Quinsay A wal of 500 leagues long Great abundance of wool and good cheape Shooes and bus kines of veluet Great abundance of Marters furres An il vse and custome A good custome to auoid inconueniences Ingenious people Wagōs with sailes Cloth of gold tissue silke Por●●an All occupations bee in streetes by themselues The son inherits his fathers occupation A strange image A mysterie of the trinitie S. Thomas preached in this kingdome The martyrdome of saint Thomas A false myracle They cast lottes They throw their gods vnder their feete A hogs head for a sacrifice Another kind of lots Inuocation to the diuell The diuell telleth lies Strange opinions Marueilous barieties The first inuention of ●●re Strange opinions The inuention of plough and spade The first king of China The soule is immortall Strange ob sequies They make their sacrifices in the night Great superstition Gallant colours for religious men Gallant bels The eldest sonne is prohibited to take orders A straung kindof buriall They that haue most daughters are most richest They may marrie with many wiues Honest women A straung kind of marriage A good order to auoid idle people I would the like were with vs. A very good order A mirror for vs to looke vpon Vitey the first king of China Which is foure yeardes quarter and halfe The first inuention of garments and dying o● colours No women to be idle A strange kind of h●●rb A citie of a daies iourney long Foure curious halles Punished for taking bribes The rent of the king Puregold Fine siluer Pearles Precious stones Muske and amber Rice Barley Wheate Salt Mayz Millo Panizo Other graine Peeces of silke Raw silke Cotton wool Mantels Great care for to defend their countrie Uerie ill horsemen The number of souldiers in all China The souldier is roially paid The number of footemen horsemen They haue no neede of other nations Straight lawes Councellers must be expert in sciences Euery prouince hath his viceroy Captaine generall A very good propertie of Iustices A very good order A very good consideration An occasion of amitie betwixt neighbours Cruell tormentes A more cruel● torment A great care to do true Iustice. Ceremonies in performing of their oth Thirteene prisons in euery great cittie Uictualing houses in the prisons and shops Adulterie is death Paper made of the filme of canes Pens made of canes Any good thing gratified The order of their commencement in schooles The first inuenting of armor Artilerie 1300. yeares before vs. A strange kind of courtesie Where Limahon was born● One rouer robbed an other One hundred and thirtie great ships of warre with fortie thousand men They do more est●eme hono● than losse of ships or men A good praise of others The captaine generall of the king of China Omoncon promiseth to carrie the friers vnto China A good pretence The Friers names that wēt to China A token that fine cloath is esteemed They departed towards China Their compasses diuided into 12. parts They leaue the worshiping of one Idol to worship another They call the Spaniards Castillias Ensignes to knowe the Iustices ●e first lan●ing of the Fryers The vse of their bankets Wine of a palme tree A thing to keepe away the sunne The people of the countrie weare no weapons but the souldiers Chincheo hath seuentie thousand housholds A thousand ships in one riuer They haue no vse of castles Earth quaks in this countrey Rich marchandice Triumphant arches Great mai●stie He offered 500. shippes of warre Note the spaniards ●nsolencie A citie of three hundred thousand housholds A city bigger thē the other and requireth three daies to go from one gate to an other Seuentie leagues compasse The wall of the Citie is fiue fadam high four● broad The citie double mooted A strange ●eremonie Comedies vsed amongest them Tomblers The argument of the●● comedie All things good cheape 111. Idols in one chappell People in great subiec●ion Suspition of euill The vse of their mustering Souldiers are punished Their mustering is one throughout the whole kingdome Superstitiō To keepe away the sun S●range sacrifices Mine kine and horse The Chinos are fearefull of the sea From the Philippinas to the China is two hundred leagues The papists and ●h● Infidels ●eremoni●s much alike The Spaniards rise at thei midnight mattens and whip themselues They were in great perill The Friers vsed certaine coniurations for that S. Antonie was a sleepe Marke the Friers con●fession of Images The Chinos most vpright in all their iudgements and in execution of iustice The vizroies commission A sacred thing no doubt of it A prophesie Canarias Fortunadas The names of the Canarias Much snow Great quantitie of brimstone Thedropping from a tree doth seruethe whole Iland with water Opinions of this Iland