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During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries religious zeal
nourished by the mendicants' sense of purpose motivated Dominican
and Franciscan friars to venture far beyond Europe's cultural
frontiers to spread their Christian faith into the farthest reaches
of Asia. Their incredible journeys were reminiscent of heroic
missionary ventures in earlier eras and far more exotic than
evangelization during the tenth through twelfth centuries, when the
western church Christianized Eastern Europe and Scandinavia. This
new mission effort was stimulated by a variety of factors and
facilitated by the establishment of the Mongol Empire, and, as the
fourteenth century dawned, missionaries entertained fervent but
vain hopes of success within khanates in China, Central Asia,
Persia and Kipchak. The reports these missionaries sent back to
Europe have fascinated successive generations of historians who
analyzed their travels and struggled to understand their motives
and aspirations. The essays selected for this volume, drawn from a
range of twentieth-century historians and contextualized in the
introduction, provide a comprehensive overview of missionary
efforts in Asia, and of the developments in the secular world that
both made them possible and encouraged the missionaries' hopes for
success. Three of the studies have been translated from French
specially for publication in this volume.
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