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GIOVANNI DI MONTE CORVINO (c. 1247—1328)

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 764 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIOVANNI DI

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MONTE CORVINO (c. 1247—1328)  , Franciscan missionary, traveller and statesman, founder of the earliest
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Roman Catholic missions in India and
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China, and archbishop of Peking . In 1272 he was commissioned by the emperor Michael
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Palaeologus, to Pope Gregory X., to negotiate for the
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reunion of Greek and Latin churches . From 1275 to 1289 he laboured incessantly as a missionary in the Nearer and
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Middle East . In 1289 he revisited the Papal Court, and was sent out as Roman legate to the
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Great Khan, the Ilkhan of
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Persia, and other leading personages of the Mongol
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world, as well as to the " emperor of Ethiopia " or Abyssinian
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Negus . Arriving at
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Tabriz, then the chief city of Mongol Persia, and indeed of all Western
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Asia,
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Monte Corvino moved down to India to the
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Madras region or " Country of St Thomas, " from which he wrote home, in December 1291 (or 1292), the earliest noteworthy account of the Coromandel coast furnished by any Western
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European . He next appears in " Cambaliech " or Peking, and wrote letters (of
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Jan . 8, 1305, and Feb . 13, 1306), describing the progress of the Roman
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mission in the Far East, in spite of Nestorian opposition; alluding to the Roman Catholic community he had founded in India, and to an
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appeal he had received to preach in " Ethiopia " and dealing with overland and oversea routes to "
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Cathay," from the Black Sea and the Persian Gulf respectively . In 1303 he received his first colleague, the Franciscan Arnold of Cologne; in 1307 Pope Clement V. created him archbishop of Peking, and despatched seven bishops to consecrate and assist him; three only of these arrived (1308) . Three more suffragans were sent out in 1312, of whom one at least reached East Asia . A Franciscan tradition maintains that about 1310 Monte Corvino converted the Great Khan (i.e . Khaishan Kuluk, third of the Yuen dynasty; 1307-1311) : this has been disputed, but he unquestionably won remarkable successes in North and East China .

Besides three mission stations in Peking, he established one near the

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present
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Amoy harbour, opposite Formosa . At his
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death, about 1328,
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heathen vied with Christian in honouring him . He was apparently the only effective European bishop in the Peking of the middle ages . The
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MSS. of Monte Corvino's Letters exist in the Laurentian Library, Florence (for the
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Indian
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Epistle) and in the
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National Library, Paris, 5006
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Lat.—viz. the
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Liber de aetatibus, fols . 170, v.-172, r . (for the Chinese) . They are printed in Wadding, Annales minorum (A.D . 1305 and 1306) vi . 69-72, 91-92 (ed. of 1733, &c.), and in the Miinchner gelehrte Anzeigen (1855), No . 22,
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part iii, pp . 171-175 .
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English
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translations, with valuable comments, are in
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Sir H .

Yule's Cathay, i . 197—221 . See also Wadding, Annales, v . 195-198, 199-203, Vi . 93, &C., 147, &C., 176, &C., 467, &C.; C . R . Beazley, Dawn of
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Modern Geography, iii . 162—178, 206-210; Sir H . Yule, Cathay, i . 165-173 . (C . R .

End of Article: GIOVANNI DI MONTE CORVINO (c. 1247—1328)
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