‘The travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle, a noble Roman, into East-India and Arabia Deserta. In which, the several countries, together with the customs, manners, traffique, and rites both religious and civil, of those Oriental princes and nations, are faithfully described: In familiar letters to his friend Signior Mario Schipano. Whereunto is added a relation of Sir Thomas Roe’s voyage into the East-Indies’ [1] (22/508)
The record is made up of 1 volume (480 pages). It was created in 1665. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: Printed Collections.
Transcription
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
THE
jefii
hws,
tferij
cittern -y
THE
TRAVELS
O F
Peter Delia Valle,
( f.- - ■ '• 1 " ' *
Sirnanted
The Traveller.
Containing a Description of the
EAST'IPCDIES,
LETTER I-
From Surat, March 22. Anno 162^.
N the beginning of this year, at my departure
from VerSa, i writ laft to you from aboard the
Ship call'd the Whale, in which i was newly
embarqu'd upon the coafts of that Country,
and had not yet begun ray Voyage- iunce
which time having fail'd over a good part ot
the Ocean, arriv'd at the famous Countries of
India, travell'd and view'd no inconfiderable pOTtion thereotj
by con veniency of the fame Ship which brought me hithw, and
is ready to fet fail fpeedily towards in the A"bian C p ,
(and the rather for that a German Gentleman a nen
is embarqu'd in her, with an intention to , ,,,}'; r h
cafe he can get pa(rage,to fee Ethiowith this e ,
I recommend to him to get tranfmitted into Hay, ' p , *
from thofe Ports of the Red Sea, or by the way of .
/
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The travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle, a noble Roman, into East-India and Arabia Deserta. In which, the several countries, together with the customs, manners, traffique, and rites both religious and civil, of those Oriental princes and nations, are faithfully described: In familiar letters to his friend Signior Mario Schipano. Whereunto is added a relation of Sir Thomas Roe’s voyage into the East-Indies . Translated from the Italian by George Havers. A dedication, written by Havers to the Right Honourable Roger, Earl of Orrery, precedes the main text. The second part of the volume, A Voyage to East-India with a description of the large territories under the subjection of the Great Mogol , was written by Edward Terry, and not, as the frontispiece suggests, by Sir Thomas Roe.
Publication details: Printed by J Macock for Henry Herringman, London, 1665.
There are pencil and ink annotations in margins of many pages in the volume. The index at the end of the volume is handwritten, and contains entries for: Persia, Portuguize [Portuguese], Surat, Ormuz [Hormuz], Cambay [Khambhat], and Shah Abbas.
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‘The travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle, a noble Roman, into East-India and Arabia Deserta. In which, the several countries, together with the customs, manners, traffique, and rites both religious and civil, of those Oriental princes and nations, are faithfully described: In familiar letters to his friend Signior Mario Schipano. Whereunto is added a relation of Sir Thomas Roe’s voyage into the East-Indies’ [1] (22/508), British Library: Printed Collections, 212.d.1., in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023664258.0x000017> [accessed 20 February 2025]
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- Reference
- 212.d.1.
- Title
- ‘The travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle, a noble Roman, into East-India and Arabia Deserta. In which, the several countries, together with the customs, manners, traffique, and rites both religious and civil, of those Oriental princes and nations, are faithfully described: In familiar letters to his friend Signior Mario Schipano. Whereunto is added a relation of Sir Thomas Roe’s voyage into the East-Indies’
- Pages
- front, back, spine, edge, head, tail, front-i, i-r:iv-v, 1:6, 1:480, v-r:vii-v, back-i
- Author
- Public service broadcasting
- Usage terms
- Public Domain
- Reference
- 212.d.1.
- Title
- ‘The travels of Sig. Pietro della Valle, a noble Roman, into East-India and Arabia Deserta. In which, the several countries, together with the customs, manners, traffique, and rites both religious and civil, of those Oriental princes and nations, are faithfully described: In familiar letters to his friend Signior Mario Schipano. Whereunto is added a relation of Sir Thomas Roe’s voyage into the East-Indies’
- Pages
- front, back, spine, edge, head, tail, front-i, i-r:iv-v, 1:6, 1:480, v-r:vii-v, back-i
- Author
- Public service broadcasting
- Usage terms
- Public Domain