-
Khanbaliqs ("Combalich" in the land of "Kitaisk" on the Ob
River and "
Cambalu" in "Cataia"
north of the
Great Wall) and one
Beijing ("Paquin", at its...
- Xanton), and
Cataio (inland of
China and Chequan, and
including the
capital Cambalu, Xandu, and a
marble bridge) are all
shown as
separate regions on this...
- "Cataio" and
Xanton (Shandong)). The
objects in "Cataio" are
based on
Marco Polo's
description and
include the
capital Cambalu, Xandu, and a
marble bridge....
- (located
inland of
China and
Chequan (Zhejiang), and
including the
capital Cambalu, Xandu, and a
marble bridge) are all
shown as
separate regions on this...
- lines: And when you have
ridden three days from the city last
mentioned (
Cambalu, or
modern Beijing),
between north-east and north, you come to a city called...
- the
Gorgus of
Morgantina (Ancient Gr****: Γοργὸς Μοργαντῖνος),
surnamed Cambalus (Ancient Gr****: Κάμβαλος) who was one of the
chief men of
wealth and authority...
- as
Khanbaliq (Combalich in the land of "Kitaisk" on the Ob River, and
Cambalu, in "Cataia") and once as
Paquin (Beijing), in the
prefecture of Xuntien...
-
After Mönke's death,
Kublai became the Khan. He
established the city of
Cambalu, the site of present-day Beijing, from
which he
ruled a vast
empire stretching...
- but did not
necessarily identify it
either with
Marco Polo's
Cataia (capital,
Cambalu) or with
China (capital, Paquin). (Map by
Jodocus Hondius, 1610)...
- Khanbaliq, an old term for Beijing,
written by
Marco Polo in his
Travels as
Cambalu,
translated by
William Marsden as
Kanbalu This
disambiguation page lists...