'''A Journey Beyond the Three Seas''' (, ''Khozhdeniye za tri morya'') is a
Russian literary monument in the form of travel notes, made by a
merchant from
Tver Afanasiy Nikitin during his journey to
India in
1466-
1472.
''A Journey Beyond the Three Seas'' was the first Russian literary work to depict a strictly
commercial, non-
religious trip. The author visited the
Caucasus,
Persia, India and the
Crimea. However, most of the notes are dedicated to India, its political structure,
trade,
agriculture,
customs and ceremonies. The work is full of lyrical
digressions and
autobiographic passages. Its last page is in
Turkic and the broken
Arabic language; these are, in fact, typical Muslim prayers, indicating that Nikitin probably converted to Islam while he was in India, although his lapse from Christianity bothered him as he mentions several times in the text.
[1]
In
1475, the
manuscript made its way to
Moscow into the hands of a government official Vasili Mamyrev. Later on, it was incorporated into the
annalistic code of
1489, the
Sofia Second Chronicle and the
Lvov Chronicle.
References
1. For a translation of Nikitin's account, see Richard H. Major, ed. "The Travels of Athanasius Nikitin," tr. Mikhail M. Wielhorsky. In India ''in the Fifteenth Century''. Hakluyt Society, ser. 1. volume 22. (London: Hakluyt Society, 1857). For a historical and literary analysis of the text, see Gail Lenhoff and Janet Martin "The Commercial and Cultural Context of Afanasij Nikitin's Journey Beyond Three Seas." Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 37, No. 3 (1989):321 - 344; See also Janet Martin, "Muscovite Travelling Merchants: The Trade with the Muslim East (Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries)." Central Asian Studies 4, No. 3 (1985):21 - 38.
External link
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Full text of ''A Journey Beyond Three Seas''
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English translation of ''A Journey Beyond Three Seas''