The Travels of Marco Polo — Volume 1 by Marco Polo and da Pisa Rusticiano
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
OF THE PROVINCE OF CHARCHAN.
Charchan is a Province of Great Turkey, lying between north-east
and east. The people worship Mahommet. There are numerous towns and
villages, and the chief city of the kingdom bears its name, Charchan.
The Province contains rivers which bring down Jasper and Chalcedony,
and these are carried for sale into Cathay, where they fetch great
prices. The whole of the Province is sandy, and so is the road all the
way from Pein, and much of the water that you find is bitter and bad.
However, at some places you do find fresh and sweet water. When an army
passes through the land, the people escape with their wives, children,
and cattle a distance of two or three days’ journey into the sandy
waste; and knowing the spots where water is to be had, they are able to
live there, and to keep their cattle alive, whilst it is impossible to
discover them; for the wind immediately blows the sand over their track.
Quitting Charchan, you ride some five days through the sands, finding
none but bad and bitter water, and then you come to a place where the
water is sweet. And now I will tell you of a province called Lop, in
which there is a city, also called LOP, which you come to at the end of
those five days. It is at the entrance of the great Desert, and it is
here that travellers repose before entering on the Desert.{1}
NOTE 1.—Though the _Lake_ of Lob or Lop appears on all our maps,
from Chinese authority, the latter does not seem to have supplied
information as to a town so called. We have, however, indications
of the existence of such a place, both mediæval and recent. The
History of Mirza Haidar, called the Táríkh-i-Rashídí, already
referred to, in describing the Great Basin of Eastern Turkestan,
says: “Formerly there were several large cities in this plain;
the names of two have survived—_Lob_ and _Kank_, but of the rest
there is no trace or tradition; all is buried under the sand.”
[Forsyth (_J. R. G. S._ XLVII. 1877, p. 5) says that he thinks
that this Kank is probably the Katak mentioned by Mirza Haidar.—H.
C.] In another place the same history says that a boy heir of the
house of Chaghatai, to save him from a usurper, was sent away to
Sárígh Uighúr and _Lob-Kank_, far in the East. Again, in the short
notices of the cities of Turkestan which Mr. Wathen collected at
Bombay from pilgrims of those regions on their way to Mecca, we
find the following: “_Lopp_.—Lopp is situated at a great distance
from Yarkand. The inhabitants are principally Chinese; but a few
Uzbeks reside there. Lopp is remarkable for a salt-water lake in
its vicinity.” Johnson, speaking of a road from Tibet into Khotan,
says: “This route ... leads not only to Ilchi and Yarkand, but
also _viâ_ _Lob_ to the large and important city of Karashahr.”
And among the routes attached to Mr. Johnson’s original Report, we
have:—
“Route No. VII. _Kiria_ (see note 1 to last chapter) to CHACHAN and
LOB (_from native information_).”
This first revealed to me the continued existence of Marco’s
Charchan; for it was impossible to doubt that in the CHACHAN and
LOB of this Itinerary we had his Charchan and Lop; and his route to
the verge of the Great Desert was thus made clear.
Mr. Johnson’s information made the journey from Kiria to Charchan
to be 9 marches, estimated by him to amount to 154 miles, and
adding 69 miles from Ilchi to Kiria (which he actually traversed)
we have 13 marches or 223 miles for the distance from Ilchi to
Charchan. Mr. Shaw has since obtained a route between Ilchi and Lob
on very good authority. This makes the distance to Charchan, or
_Charchand_, as it is called, 22 marches, which Mr. Shaw estimates
at 293 miles. Both give 6 marches from Charchand to Lob, which is
in fair accordance with Polo’s 5, and Shaw estimates the whole
distance from Ilchi to Lob at 373, or by another calculation at
384 miles, say roundly 380 miles. This higher estimate is to be
preferred to Mr. Johnson’s for a reason which will appear under
next chapter.
Mr. Shaw’s informant, Rozi of Khotan, who had lived twelve years
at Charchand, described the latter as a small town with a district
extending on both sides of a stream which flows to Lob, _and which
affords Jade_. The people are Musulmans. They grow wheat, Indian
corn, pears, and apples, etc., but no cotton or rice. It stands in
a great plain, but the mountains are not far off. The nature of the
products leads Mr. Shaw to think it must stand a good deal higher
than Ilchi (4000), perhaps at about 6000 feet. I may observe that
the Chinese hydrography of the Kashgar Basin, translated by Julien
in the _N. An. des Voyages_ for 1846 (vol. iii.), seems to imply
that mountains from the south approach within some 20 miles of the
Tarim River, between the longitude of Shayar and Lake Lop. The
people of Lob are Musulman also, but very uncivilised. The Lake is
salt. The hydrography calls it about 200 _li_ (say 66 miles) from
E. to W. and half that from N. to S., and expresses the old belief
that it forms the subterranean source of the Hwang-Ho. Shaw’s
Itinerary shows “salt pools” at six of the stations between Kiria
and Charchand, so Marco’s memory in this also was exact.
_Nia_, a town two marches from Kiria according to Johnson, or
four according to Shaw, is probably the ancient city of Ni-jang
of the ancient Chinese Itineraries, which lay 30 or 40 miles on
the China side of Pima, in the middle of a great marsh, and formed
the eastern frontier of Khotan bordering on the Desert. (_J. R. G.
S._ XXXVII. pp. 13 and 44; also Sir H. Rawlinson in XLII. p. 503;
_Erskine’s Baber and Humayun_, I. 42; _Proc. R. G. S._ vol. xvi.
pp. 244–249; _J. A. S. B._ IV. 656; _H. de la V. de Khotan_, u.s.)
[The Charchan of Marco Polo seems to have been built to the west
of the present oasis, a little south of the road to Kiria, where
ruined houses have been found. It must have been destroyed before
the 16th century, since Mirza Haidar does not mention it. It was
not anterior to the 7th century, as it did not exist at the time of
Hiuen Tsang. (Cf. _Grenard_, III. p. 146.)
Grenard says (pp. 183–184) that he examined the remains of what
is called the old town of Charchan, traces of the ancient canal,
ruins of dwellings deep into the sand, of which the walls built
of large and solid-baked bricks, are pretty well preserved. Save
these bricks, “I found hardly anything, the inhabitants have
pillaged everything long ago. I attempted some excavating, which
turned out to be without result, as far as I was concerned; but
the superstitious natives declared that they were the cause of a
violent storm which took place soon after. There are similar ruins
in the environs, at Yantak Koudouk, at Tatrang, one day’s march
to the north, and at Ouadjchahari at five days to the north-east,
which corresponds to the position assigned to Lop by Marco Polo.”
(See _Grenard’s Haute Asie_ on _Nia_.)
Palladius is quite mistaken (_l.c._ p. 3) in saying that the
“Charchan” of Marco Polo is to be found in the present province of
Karashar. (Cf. _T. W. Kingsmill’s Notes on Marco Polo’s Route from
Khoten to China_, _Chinese Recorder_, VII. pp. 338–343; _Notes on
Doctor Sven Hedin’s Discoveries in the Valley of the Tarim, its
Cities and Peoples_, _China Review_, XXIV. No. II. pp. 59–64.)—H. C.]