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KIU CHANG CHUN (1148-1227) , See also: Chinese Taoist See also: sage and traveller, was See also: born in 1148
.
In 1219 he was invited by Jenghiz Khan, founder of the Mongol See also: empire and greatest of See also: Asiatic conquerors, to visit him
.
Jenghi# letter of invitation, dated the 15th of May 1219 (by See also: present reckoning), has been preserved, and is among the curiosities of See also: history; here the terrible See also: warrior appears as a See also: meek See also: disciple of wisdom, modest and See also: simple, almost Socratic in his self-examination, alive to many of the deepest truths of See also: life and See also: government
.
Chang Chun obeyed this summons; and leaving his home in Shantung (See also: February 1220) journeyed first to See also: Peking
.
Learning that Jenghiz had gone far west upon fresh conquests, the sage stayed the winter in Peking
.
In February 1221 he started again and crossed eastern See also: Mongolia to the See also: camp of Jenghiz' See also: brother Ujughen, near Lake Bor or Buyur in the upper See also: basin of the Kerulun-Amur
.
Thence he travelled See also: south-westward up the Kerulun, crossed the Karakorum region in See also: north-central Mongolia, and so came to the Chinese Altai, probably passing near the present Uliassutai
.
After traversing the Altai he visited Bishbalig, answering to the See also: modern Urumtsi, and moved along the north See also: side of the Tian Shan range to lake Sairam, Almalig (or Ku1ja), and the See also: rich valley of the See also: Ili
.
We then trace him to the Chu, over this See also: river to Talas and the See also: Tashkent region, and over the Jaxartes (or Syr Daria) to See also: Samarkand, where he halted for some months
.
Finally, through the " Iron See also: Gates " of Termit, over the See also: Oxus, and by way of See also: Balkh and See also: northern See also: Afghanistan, Chang Chun reached Jenghiz' camp near the See also: Hindu Kush
.
Returning home he followed much the same course as on his outward route: certain deviations, however, occur, such as a visit to Kuku-khoto
.
He was back in Peking by the end of See also: January 1224
.
From the narrative of his expedition (the Si yu ki, written by his pupil and companion Li Chi Chang) we derive some of the most faithful and vivid pictures everSee also: drawn of nature and See also: man between the See also: Great See also: Wall of See also: China and See also: Kabul, between the See also: Aral and the Yellow See also: Sea: we may particularly See also: notice the sketches of the See also: Mongols, and of the See also: people of Samarkand and its neighbourhood; the account of the fertility and products of the latter region, as of the Ili valley, at or near Almalig-See also: Kulja; and the description of various great See also: mountain ranges, peaks and defiles, such as the Chinese Altai, the Tian Shan, Mt Bogdo-ola (?), and the Iron Gates of Termit
.
There is, moreover, a noteworthy reference to a See also: land apparently identical with the uppermost valley of the See also: Yenisei
.
After his return Chang Chun lived at Peking till his See also: death on the 23rd of See also: July 1227
.
By See also: order of Jenghiz some of the former imperial garden grounds were made over to him, for the foundation of a Taoist monastery
.
See E
.
Bretschneider, Mediaeval Researches from Eastern Asiatic See also: Sources, vol. i. pp
.
35-108, where a See also: complete See also: translation of the narrative is given, with a valuable commentary; C
.
R
.
Beazley Dawn of Modern Geography, iii
.
539
.
(C
.
R
.
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