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Prester John

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Prester John

Legendary Christian prince. During the 12th and 13th centuries, Prester John was believed to be the ruler of a vast and powerful empire in the interior of Asia. From the 14th to the 16th century, he was generally believed to be the king of Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) in northeast Africa.

Reports of the prince appeared in the 12th century; he was first mentioned by the German historian Otto of Freising (c. 1111- 58), and a supposed letter from Prester John became a popular text. His message related the marvels of his realm, and its recipient was variously the Byzantine emperor, the pope, the Holy Roman Emperor, or the king of France; efforts were made by the popes to establish communication.

Prester John was also was represented as being a priest; it was said that kings owed him loyalty and service, yet he himself preferred the humbler title. The communities over which he reputedly ruled may have been those associated with the missionaries of Nestorianism, a Christian group which spread through Persia, China, Central Asia, and India after their expulsion from the Byzantine Empire in AD 431. The 13th-century Venetian traveller and writer Marco Polo reported the kingdom of Prester John, or of his successor George (sixth in line), in central Asia, but by the time of the Portuguese navigations in the 15th century, Prester John had become identified with the ruler of Ethiopia.


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What mind, that is not wholly barbarous and uncultured, can find pleasure in reading of how a great tower full of knights sails away across the sea like a ship with a fair wind, and will be to-night in Lombardy and to-morrow morning in the land of Prester John of the Indies, or some other that Ptolemy never described nor Marco Polo saw?
Its tales of the Ethiopian Prester John, of diamonds that by proper care can be made to grow, of trees whose fruit is an odd sort of lambs, and a hundred other equally remarkable phenomena, are narrated with skilful verisimilitude and still strongly hold the reader's interest, even if they no longer command belief.
I have it from my husband, who is a cinquantenier**, at the Parloir-aux Bourgeois, and who was this morning comparing the Flemish ambassadors with those of Prester John and the Emperor of Trebizond, who came from Mesopotamia to Paris, under the last king, and who wore rings in their ears.
 
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